Ewing v. Smith

3 S.C. Eq. 417
CourtCourt of Chancery of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1811
StatusPublished

This text of 3 S.C. Eq. 417 (Ewing v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewing v. Smith, 3 S.C. Eq. 417 (Conn. Super. Ct. 1811).

Opinion

[417]*417THIS case came to a hearing in February 1811, and bavins; been very fully argued, the Court took time ° . consider. In October 1811, Chancellor Desaussured! delivered his decree.

[418]*418The complainant in this case filed a bill in this Court on the 30th July 1806, against Mr. Roger Moor Smith, his wife and Mr. Thomas R. Smith,

That bill set forth, that Mr. R. M. Smith became in-debtcd to the complainant between the month of March ^yan(j january jsoi, for goods, wares and merchandizes, to the value of 448Í. 9s. Sd. supplied to -the Roger and Ins wife, for the use of themselves and ant^ for the use and benefit of the estate, which had beon his wife’s property .previous to her interinar-riage with him as appears by the exhibit, A.

That the said estate, consisting of a plantation and sundry negroes was by deeds executed on 39th, and 1st March itó, conveyed previous to hRr intermarriage to the Rev. Thomas B'rost and Thomas R. Smith, intrust to and for the use of R. M. gmith and Ann his wife, as is provided in the'said deed, which is made-an exhibit in the cause.

[419]*419That the complainant applied to the said R. M. Smith for payment of the account without success. That be-jtng apprehensive, he had little or no estate of his¡ own,. and the principal ground of expectation of payment being from the trust ¿state, it was proposed and agreed by the parties, that the saidR. M. Smith and Ann iiis wife should secure the payment of the said debt o.ut of the trust estate, by giving their bond,, upon, the complainants extending the time, of' payment for three years. And accordingly the said. R.. M. Smith and Ann his wife, by and, with the intervention, and privity of Thomas.Frost one of the-trustees in the said' deed', (testified by his being a witness to the bond) executed and delivered, to complainant their joint bond on 14 January, 1801, in the penal su,m of 89.6L. 19.s,„ Ad. with condition for the payment of; 44,81. 9s^8d. with interest on. or before 1 January 1804, as appears by a copy of said bond, filed. That the Rev. Thomas Frost hath since dep.art-. ed this life. That complainant hath, applied, to. s.aid R, [420]*420M. Smith for payment of said debt, and though he is in the receipt of the rents and profits of the estate, he hath neglected to pay the same. Complainant is apprehensive of losing his debt, and prays relief; and that the trust estate may be decreed to be liable to this debt; ag f01, tjic proper debt of the said R. M. Smith, or of the said Ann Smith, his. wife ; and as if the said estate was not settled as aforesaid, and as if she were a feme sole, more especially as the consideration thereof was in a great degree for necessary articles, which went to the use of Mrs. Smith and of the trust estate.

The exhibit A. which is the account, is of sundry articles, chiefly for family use, for the use of a lady, and for the use of a plantation and negroes; and some articles for Mr. Smith’s personal use. The exhibit B. is a copy of the deed referred to by the bill, It is a conveyance of a tract of land and 47 negroes, a part of Miss Downs’s estate to the Rev. T. Frost and Mr. Thomas R. Smith, in trust, and with a proviso, that if the heirs, &c. of the said R. M. Smith should within 6 months af[421]*421ter bis decease, pay over to the, saRl Aim Downs his intended wife, in case she, shall. ;survive, him, the sum g 22,000, with interest thereon from the, day - gf' his death, and,provided also that the said R.. M.; Smith, (if he survived her) and his heirs, &c. should pay the said sum of $ 22,000 to such person or persons as; she should give and.bequeath the same to, by her last wiljl and testament, executed in the presence of two witnesses (which last will the said R. M. Smith covenants to consent and agree to) then the said conveyance of said estate should be null and void.. , ■

There-is.a clause in the deed authorising the said R, M. Smithto sell and convey the said plantation and negroes, with the consent in writing of; the. trustees , or the survivor of them, provided; the>said lit M. Smith should secure the said sum of g,22,000 to the said Ana Downs, as in said deed, by a mortgage of. an adequate real and personal estate. . , ,

The defendant-R. M. Smth and Agn his wife, put in [422]*422a joint answer to this bill, admitted that R. M. Smith did purchase of complainant the goods in bill mentioned* aT1d being- unable to pay for them, he did at the request, 0f complainant prevail on his wife to join him in execute ing the bond mentioned in said bill. And the bond was witnessed by the late Rev. Thomas Frost, one of the trustees of the marriage settlement of the said Ann. But they the defendants cannot admit that the signature of the said Thomas F-rost was intended to signify his consent, that the property under the settlement should be charged with the payment of the said bond. On the contrary, the said defendant R. M. Smith saith that the said Thomas Frost was induced to consent to the said Ann’s joining hinv in the bond by the declaration of the obligee, that her signature was desired only for the purpose of having a claim upon her in case of the death of the said Roger.

The defendants admit that such marriage settlement was executed by them as is set forth in the said bill. But whether by virtue of the said settlement, and the, act of executing the said bond,, the attestation thereof by one of the trflstees, the property settled is chargeable with the debt and liable to be sold, for that purpose, is submitted to the judgment of the Court.

The answer of Thomas Rhett Smith,, the surviving trustee, admits the marriage settlement as. stated by complainant. Defendant states that he is ignorant of [423]*423"the transactions between the said R. M. Smith and the Complainant. Bat he insists that it appears by the complainant’s own shewing, that the contract for the ■goods was originally with R. M. Smith alone, and that the credit was given personally to him, and that it appears to have been an after thought to make Mrs. Smith and the property settled amenable to the payment of his debt, by getting her to join her husband in a bond to complainant, witnessed by the trustees.

This defendant cannot admit that the trustee, Thos. Frost, intended by his signature to subject the trust property to the payment thereof, and thus so far to destroy the trust confided to him $ but supposes it to have been an inadvertent act. But if the said Thos. Frost did intend thereby to consent to charge the trust property his act was a mere nullity, as the trust was confided in him and this defendant jointly, and neither had a right to act without the other, and this defendant denies that he ever concurred therein. And that even if this defendant had concurred in the act of his co-trustee, for the subjecting the property to the payment of the debts of R. M. Smith, the husband, or to any dispo--■sition of his wife for his accommodation other than in the mode pointed out by the settlement, to wit, by deed in the nature of a last will, executed in the presence of two witnesses, the Court would have restrained them, and refused to sanction the measure, as it would be a departure from the intent and object of the settlement.. And the defendant, Thomas R. Smith, further insisted that under the said settlement the said R. M.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.C. Eq. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-smith-ctchansc-1811.