Ex Parte Gadsden

71 S.E. 952, 89 S.C. 352, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 20, 1911
Docket7978
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 S.E. 952 (Ex Parte Gadsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Gadsden, 71 S.E. 952, 89 S.C. 352, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 271 (S.C. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The matter to be considered and decided in this cause is whether Philip H. Gadsden was guilty of such false representations or other misconduct in procuring from Miss Mary Lawrence an assignment of her interest in the estate of Joseph S. Lawrence to Mrs. E. Charlotte Lawrence, as would warrant this Court .in ordering his name to be stricken, from the roll of attorneys, or in inflicting any other penalty.

This issue grew out of the settlement of the estate of Dr. Joseph S. Lawrence, who died at Capon Springs, West Virginia, in August, 1899. His family consisted of his wife, E. Charlotte Lawrence, and two minor stepchildren. Diligent search having failed to disclose a will, the widow E. Charlotte Lawrence applied for letters of administration, which were granted to her on October 25, 1899. Upon inquiry it was discovered that the only person entitled to take with the widow under the statute of distributions was Miss Mary Lawrence, a half sister, living at Halcyondale, a small village in the State of Georgia. Philip PI. Gadsden was the attorney for Mrs. E. 'Charlotte Lawrence, and in that capacity he went to the residence of Miss Mary Law *354 rence and there obtained from her on November 3, 1899, an assignment to Mrs. E. Charlotte Lawrence of all her interest in the estate of her brother, for the consideration as therein expressed of “love and affection for my sister E. Charlotte Lawrence and other valuable consideration to me paid.” Miss Maiy S. Lawrence died in 1905 ; and her heirs and; distributees on November 7, 1907, brought an action to set aside the assignment, alleging fraud and misrepresentation in the procuring of the assignment and1 the mental incapacity of Miss Mary S. Lawrence to execute such a paper. Joseph M. Lawrence, having been thereafter appointed administrator of the .estate of Miss Mary S. Lawrence, was made a party plaintiff in his representative capacity and appropriate amendments were made to the complaint. The Charleston Consolidated Railway, Gas & Electric Company was made a party defendant, but it had no real interest in the controversy, and its answer consisted of a formal denial on information and belief. By her answer Mrs. E. Charlotte Lawrence denied the allegations of misrepresentation and fraud, and of the incapacity of Miss Lawrence, and set up the statute of limitations as a further defense.

The trial of the cause resulted in a decree of Hon. Robert Aldrich, Circuit Judge, adjudging the annulment of the assignment on the following findings of fact and of law: “I find as a matter of fact that at the time the conveyance of interest or release of Miss Mary S. Lawrence to Mrs. E. Charlotte Lawrence, on the third day of November, 1899, was made, two pregnant statements were made to her calculated to influence her to part with her interest in the estate of her deceased brother, Dr. Joseph S. Lawrence, for a trifle or for very slight consideration: Eirst, that her brother died leaving a will under which she took nothing; secondly, that even if there was ño will, his estate was insolvent and she would get nothing in that event as well. That both of these statements were misrepresentations; third, that at the time of this transaction the defendant, Mrs. E. *355 Charlotte Lawrence, who was making the deal through her attorney and agent, was administratrix of her husband’s estate and1 as such was- trustee for the creditors and the heirs, and Miss Lawrence was her cestui qui trust, and -that the transaction was in violation of the fiduciary relation existing between them. As a matter of law, that the said conveyance or release thus procured was fraudulent, null and void.”

Mrs. Lawrence appealed from this decree, assigning errors of both law and fact in the foregoing findings of the Circuit Court. While the cause was pending on appeal in this Court, Mrs. Lawrence, against the protest of Mr. Gadsden and' contrary to the advice of counsel who ha'd represented her in the litigation, through other attorneys substituted on the record as her counsel, compromised the suit by ■the payment of the sum of $95,000 to the plaintiffs. An order was then made by this Court on the consent of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, and the substituted attorneys of Mrs. Lawrence, dismissing the appeal. If the appeal had been sus'tained, the plaintiffs would have recovered nothing, and if they had been successful the property recovered would have been worth to them about $192,000. Miss Lawrence received only $500 in connection with the assignment, but the contention of the defendants was that this was a gift, and that the real consideration was her generosity combined with her conviction of duty induced by Mr. Gadsden’s statement that there was a last will by which her brother had left all his property to his wife and stepchildren.

After the consent order had been taken for the abandonment of the appeal, Mr. Gadsden filed his petition in this Court, in which, after setting out the history of the litigation between Mrs. Lawrence and the administrator of the estate of Miss Lawrence and her heirs, he alleged: “That if the opportunity for an appeal to and a review by this Court be otherwise denied to the petitioner the judgment and decree of the Circuit Judge will constitute and remain a *356 permanent and final record and decision disastrously reflecting upon the professional character of the petitioner. That as petitioner is informed and believes he has no other adequate remedy or means of redress except by appeal to this Honorable Court, and while, as aforesaid, petitioner has no pecuniary interest at stake, the petitioner 'has that at stake which is of more value than pecuniary interest, namely; his good character as an attorney at law and an officer of the Courts of South Carolina.”

The prayer of the petition was: “Wherefore, petitioner prays that this. Court will retain the record sent up on appeal from the lower Court upon which the judgment and decree of the Circuit Judge are based, and will examine the same in so far as it relates to the actings and doings of this petitioner, and inasmuch as the dismissal of the said appeal will deprive the petitioner of the opportunity of having this Court examine the record in a trial upon the merits, the petitioner appeals, as an officer of the Court, ito the jurisdiction of the Court for such protection as is due to an officer of the Court under such circumstances, and he asks that the Court will upon such examinaton of the record pronounce such judgment with respect to the petitioner as the record1 shall in the opinion of this Court demand.”

Upon hearing the petition, this Court held that Mr. Gadsden, as an officer of. the Court, had the right to an investigation of his conduct and a judgment thereon at the hands of the Court. The Attorney General was requested by the Court to appear as amicus curiae in the public interest. At the hearing, the petitioner submitted the entire record in the original cause, including all the evidence, as his vindication. The only additional evidence offered was the testimony of Mr. Holman, one of the attorneys for the administratrix and heirs of Miss Mary Lawrence, as to the terms of settlement of the original cause made by Mrs. Lawrence. After consideration of the evidence in the light of the able *357

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.E. 952, 89 S.C. 352, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-gadsden-sc-1911.