Dubose v. James

16 S.C. Eq. 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 16 S.C. Eq. 55 (Dubose v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dubose v. James, 16 S.C. Eq. 55 (S.C. Ct. App. 1840).

Opinions

The complainants are the children of David Dubose, who died intestate, in 1817. The defendant, M. James, administered on his estate. A part of the estate consisted of a tract of land of four hundred and fifty acres, situate on Half-way Swamp Creek, in Sumter district. Prior to [56]*56June, 1822, the defendant, James, filed his hill against the complainants, who were infants, alleging that it would he beneficial to the estate, to sell this tract and purchase other lands, and praying that he might he authorized to sell said tract, at four dollars per acre. Answers were duly filed; a report made recommending that the prayer he granted, and the report confirmed on the 19th June, 1822. Perhaps it is proper here to state, that M. James was, at that time, the surviving trustee to the marriage settlement of Robert Brailsford, and Elizabeth James, his former wife, by which her estate was settled to their joint use, during their joint lives, then to the use of the survivor, and on the death of the survivor, to the children of the joint marriage. About the period of the proceedings last mentioned, Robert Brailsford took possession of a tract of 280 acres, being part of the above tract of 450 acres, which James was authorized to sell, and cultivated the same, with the ne-groes of the trust estate, until his death in 1826. In the mean time, James had purchased for the estate of Dubose, the Manning tract, which he had proposed to substitute for the tract which this court had authorized him to sell. On the 11th July, 1826, M. James filed his bill against the children of Robert Brailsford, setting forth the proceedings and order of June, 1822, and that in pursuance of said order, and in compliance therewith, he had sold 300 acres to Robert Brailsford, for $850, which was to be paid in twelve months, with interest from 1st January, 1822— that Brailsford occupied and cultivated the land for the last five years, but had recently died without paying the purchase money. The bill then set forth the marriage settlement, and that the complainant, M. James, “was desirous that the said contract should be sanctioned, which was a beneficial one to the said trust estate. But owing to his being a trustee in the deed referred to, and administrator on the estate of David Dubose, and commissioned by this court to effect a sale of the land, and owing to the said contract not being reduced to writing, and the minority of the children of the said Robert Brailsford, he is unable to effectuate said sale and contract, without the agency and authority of this court.” The bill substantially charged, that the land had been purchased for the benefit [57]*57of the children, and would now be beneficial to them, and prayed that it might be confirmed; and that the court would direct an application of so much of the settled trust estate, as would pay the purchase money and interest, or that the said trust estate might pay the rent of said land, the contract be rescinded, and the complainant, James, be authorized to sell to others. After a reference to the commissioner, he reported the facts, and concluded with a recommendation, “that M. James, who is trustee of the said estate, be allowed to retain the sum of $800, with interest from 1st January, 1822; and that he do execute a deed of conveyance of said land, to the children of said Brailsford mentioned in the said bill, and that he also have the same recordedwhich report, on 23d February, was duly confirmed. The deed was not executed, because, as M. James says in his answer, he was unable to find the deed from W. J. Rees and R. S. Moore to David Dubose, or the record of it, although both Rees and Moore, when applied to, assured him that they had executed such deed. He also states, that in 1827, having accounted under the order of this court for his administration on D. Dubose’s estate, he surrendered to the complainant, D. St. Perre Dubose, the control and management of the property, and that he, James, “ as trustee to the estate embraced in the marriage settlement of Brailsford and wife, frequently applied to the said D. St. P. Dubose, and urged him to procure from the said Moore and Rees, some such instrument as would perfect the title in the estate of the said D. Dubose, and that an unobjectionable title might thus be secured for the trust estate.” In this doubtful condition, the matter rested for four or five years, when the land ceased to be cultivated, and was abandoned by the trustee and cestui que trusts, but he states, he cannot deny that he and they remained in quiet possession of the land, until 1831 or 1832. In the spring of 1834, Thomas C. Richardson having caused a survey to be made of his lands, it was discovered that the lands purchased by D. Dubose, from Moore and Rees, were included in an elder grant to Comfort Strange, under whom, says M. James, Thomas C. Richardson claimed; whereupon, he, the trustee, (who had previously informed the complainants, that the. trust estate of Robert Brailsford [58]*58could not be burtliened with lands, the title of which was defective,) “ no w explicitly notified him that the estate of which he was trustee, could not take land from the estate of D. Dubose, to which there was not, in said estate, the shadow of title and the said trustee and cestui que trusts then relinquished and abandoned the land.” In the former suit by these complainants, against James, as administrator, a decree had been rendered in favor of the administrator, for the sum of $2138, with interest from 1830. In April, 1836, execution was lodged. On 23d May, 1837, this bill was filed against M. James and the children of Robert Brailsford, alleging among other things, that the said trustee had promised that the said sum of $800, with interest from 1st January, 1822, had been credited, or should be credited, on the said execution, and praying to have the benefit of the decree of June, 1827, and that the amount due, may be paid them by the said M. James and the other defendants, or credited on the execution in favor of the said M. James.

The answer of M. James, among other matters, denies “that he ever informed the complainants that he had credited the money for which the said land was sold, on the execution; but he may, and believes he did mention to them, that he intended to credit the sum, if good title could be made.”

•By an order heretofore made in this cause, the commissioner was directed to enquire, among other things, “whether the estate of David Dubose had procured a good title to be made to the said land, to M. James, trustee, <fec., or whether the said estate is able to make, or procure to be made, good titles for the same.” The report of the commissioner accompanies this decree. It is there stated, that the complainant gave in evidence, a receipt of Thomas C. Richardson, dated 10th December, 1836, for $650, being for the land specified in the order of reference; also, a conveyance of Thomas C. Richardson, to M. James, trustee of the Brailsfords, for the same land, dated 30th Dec., 1837; the due execution of this deed, was proved by one of its subscribing witnesses, but not the delivery to, or acceptance by M. James. It is first proper to consider the claims of the complainants on M. James, and this is, per[59]*59haps, the more natural course, as he unites with the other defendants, in urging that the complainants have no right, as against those other defendants, under the decree February, 1827, not being party or privy thereto. Adopting, as correct, the statements of M. James, in his bill of 1826, it appears to the court that he must, himself, be regarded as the purchaser at his own sale, under the decretal order of June, 1822.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.C. Eq. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubose-v-james-scctapp-1840.