Crump v. Gerock

40 Miss. 765
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 40 Miss. 765 (Crump v. Gerock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crump v. Gerock, 40 Miss. 765 (Mich. 1866).

Opinion

Ellett, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the settlement of the final account of George Q. Roberts, as guardian of Eliza Jane Roberts (now Geroek), presented to the Probate Court by the appellants, as. administrators of said Roberts, several questions arose which are brought to this court for adjudication.

First. During the continuance of the guardianship, the guar[768]*768dian every year hired the slaves of the ward, under the authority of the Probate Court, by which the amount of the annual hire was fixed, and the sum so ascertained was regularly carried, year after year, into the guardian’s accounts, and there charged to him as a part of the income of his ward, the balances being regularly transferred from each account to the next. On the settlement of the final account, the ward insisted, by a proper exception, that interest ought to be charged against the guardian on all these sums, from their dates, at ten per cent, per annum, compounded annually. The judge sustained this exception so far as to charge the guardian with simple interest on all the sums so reported and charged by him in his said annual accounts, for the hire of the slaves of the ward; and this action of the court is assigned for error.

The legal question involved in this point has been considered in another case at this term (Roach, v. Jelles), and the principles laid down by this court in the case of Reynolds v. Walker, 29 Miss. 250, in regard to the liability of guardians for the payment of interest on money in their hands, as such have been announced as the settled doctrines of the court. The rule is, that under our statutes a guardian cannot be charged with interest on any balance of money in his hands on his accounts, unless he has consented to take the same at interest, with the approbation of the court, or has been directed by the court to place the money at interest, or unless he has employed it by using it in his own business, or by loaning it to others, or has in some manner made a profit by it. This was equally the rule before and since the Rev. Code, no material change having been made in the statutes on the subject.

Counsel for the appellees endeavor to maintain the charge on two grounds:

First, that the hire of the slaves was a debt of the guardian to his ward, which he owed and had not paid; and secondly, that he had agreed or consented to pay the interest.

As to the first of these grounds, it may be remarked that the guardian charged himself with the hire as it fell due, in his annual accounts, as cash in his hands. Being at the same time [769]*769tbe party liable to pay, and tbe person entitled to receive, there was no possible way in which he could make any payment of the money except by charging himself with it as cash in his accounts. By doing so, he brought the money directly under the jurisdiction of the Probate Court, and involved his sureties in liability for its administration. After being so reported, it remained a debt due by the guardian to the ward in no other sense than any other money in his hands belonging to the ward derived from any other source; and the liability of the guardian to pay interest upon it is not different from his liability to pay interest on any other funds in his hands.

As to the second ground relied on to sustain this charge of interest, to wit, that the guardian agreed or consented to pay it, the proof in support of the fact alleged is as follows: A record was given in evidence of a suit in the Chancery Court of Yazoo county, brought in November, 1857, by George Q. Roberts, the guardian in his individual right, against the administratrix of the estate of his deceased brother, in which he alleged that the slaves of his ward, hired by him as above stated, had been worked by him for several years on a plantation owned and cultivated by himself and his brother in partnership, and sought to recover one-half of their hire, for the time they were so employed, from the estate of his said brother. In the course of his bill of complaint, and also in an amended bill in the same cause, he states “ that he is, as guardian, responsible to his ward for these several amounts for the hire of said negroes, and for interest on each year’s hire, from the end of the year.” This averment is relied on as the proof of the alleged agreement to pay interest on the hire, but it is not entitled to have any such effect. It does not take the form of a promise or agreement with his ward, or with anybody else, to pay such interest; and it can, at the most, be regarded only as the expression of his opinion that by law he is responsible for it. But even that would be giving it an importance that is . not due to it. The bill is not sworn to, and was not signed by the party, and there is nothing to show that he ever saw it or knew what was in it. Such averments are generally the mere act [770]*770of tbe counsel preparing the bill and stating tbe case according to his own views of the relief to which his client may be entitled. It is on this ground chiefly that unsworn pleadings in a cause, at law or in equity, are never admitted as evidence against the party pleading, as admissions or declarations of the facts contained in them. 1 Phil. Ev., 358 ; Gres. Eq. Ev., 322; 2 Phil. Ev., O. and II., note 331; Banbury Peerage Case, 2 Selw. N. P. 165. Still less could a party be bound by an expression of opinion as to the extent of his legal lights or liabilities. The defendant in her answer to this part of the bill, in much closer conformity to the true rule, denies the liability, and insists that the guardian is not chargeable with interest upon annual balances, unless instructed or directed by an- order of the Probate Court to retain the same upon interest, or to loan it out, or unless he agrees to keep the same on interest. But neither the bill nor the answer is any proof for or against the existence of the liability. There being, then, no evidence of any promise or contract for the payment of interest, and no pretence that the Probate Court directed the guardian to loan the money on interest, or that he consented to take it at interest, or that he used it, or loaned it, or made a profit by it, it was erroneous for the court to allow interest on the sums charged in the accounts for the hire of negroes.

Secondly. Roberts was first appointed guardian in Holmes county, but being desirous to remove the guardianship to the Probate Court of the county of Yazoo, he proceeded under the statute then in force (Hutch. Code, 617, article 12, section 3), to settle a final account there, and having shown that he had been appointed and qualified in the county of Yazoo, his letters in Holmes county were revoked, and he was discharged from any further responsibility on account of the same. On this final account there appeared a balance in Ms hands, as guardian, of $455.17, which he was ordered to pay over according to the statute. This balance was the residue of the hire of the negroes for the years 1848 and 1849, after deducting the expenses of the ward, and commissions allowed the guardian. On the exceptions filed by the appellees, the court below [771]*771charged the guardian with interest on this balance of $455.17, from the date of the final settlement of the guardianship in Holmes county, to the time of the decree appealed from, and this action of the court is also assigned for error.

"We think this item stands upon a different footing from those we have been before considering.

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40 Miss. 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crump-v-gerock-miss-1866.