Ex parte Glenn

20 S.C. 64, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 28, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 S.C. 64 (Ex parte Glenn) 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 Glenn, 20 S.C. 64, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 127 (S.C. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Simpson.

Dr. George W. Glenn, Sr., late of Newberry county, died in 1866. The appellants, his two sons, administered upon his estate. In June, 1870, they filed a petition in the Probate Court for a final settlement, but this was delayed, as it is alleged, by suits against the estate, especially the suit of one Harvey Terry against the stockholders of the Commercial Bank, which suit largely involved the estate. This suit, however, having terminated in July, 1881, another publication was made, and the settlement proceeded to a decree by the Probate Court. Erom this decree an appeal was taken to the Circuit Court, Judge Pressley presiding, and from Judge Pressley’s decree, the matter is now before us on appeal.

The questions presented are: First. Whether certain of the distributees should account, as for advancements, for certain slaves given off to them by their father, the intestate, during his life, to wit, in 1860; the said intestate having died after emancipation, and some of the distributees having sold the slaves received, before emancipation. Second. G. W. Glenn, Jr., one of the appellants, under an order of court, rented the real estate of his father in 1867 at $500 in gold, and had charged himself in December, 1867, for said rent, $500, $166 of which he had paid out to Mary A. Glenn, one of the distributees. Gold at that time was at 40 per cent, premium, and the question is, Should he be charged with this premium, or simply for gold ? Third. The appellants, some time before the death of their father, to wit, in 1859, had borrowed of their uncle, one John Glenn, the sum of $5,000, for which they gave their note, with their father, the intestate, as surety. In 1859 John Glenn died, and G. W. Glenn, Sr., the intestate, administered on his estáte and became possessed of this note. In 1863, G. W. Glenn, Jr.', paid on this note about $2,300. After this payment, and a short time before his death, G. W. Glenn, Sr., destroyed this note, having charged himself with it in the estate of his intestate, John Glenn, and the question as to this note is, whether the appellants should account for the same in full, debt and interest, or whether it should be regarded as an advancement to them by their father, [68]*68and, if so, at wbat time, or rather to what time, should interest on the note be added in ascertaining the amount of the advancement, and, also, in what proportion should each appellant account? Fourth. Should the appellants be charged with interest on the funds of the estate in their hands during the delayed settlement? Fifth. Should a gold watch, valued at $130, given to one of the distributees, Mrs. Mims, be'charged as an advancement with the negroes bought by her husband?

As to these questions, Judge Pressley held: 1. Under the case of Hughey v. Mehelberger, 11 S. O. 51, that the negroes could not be regarded as advancements. 2. That the $5,000 note destroyed by the intestate, should be charged as an advancement to the appellants without interest until after the death of the intestate. 3. That G. W. Glenn, Jr., should be charged with 40 per cent, premium on the $500 rental of the land of his father. 4. That in the absence of all proof that appellants had kept the funds idle and uninvested, pending the litigation against them, they are liable for interest on their annual balances, and the interest should be calculated according to the rule laid down in Baher v. Lafitte, 4 Rich. Eq. 392. He made no decree as to the gold watch.

The appeal involves a review of these questions, and the rulings thereon by the Circuit judge. The decree adjudged other matters of interest to the parties, but the appeal embraces only the questions above stated. As to the first question, we regard the case of Hughey v. Mehelberger, supra, as conclusive and controlling. It was there held distinctly, Justice Mclver delivering the opinion of the court, that where the parent had died after the abolition of slavery, slaves previously given off to a child, could not, under our statute, be charged as an advancement in the settlement of the estate of the father, the question as to the services of such slaves while in the child’s possession being reserved, as the point was not raised in the case. Nor is that point raised here. It is true that, in the case of Hughey v. Mehelberger, the court was somewhat influenced by the ground taken by the appellant’s counsel, to wit, that the father there had reserved a life-estate in the negroes given to the child; but the main ground relied upon by the court was the construction of [69]*69the act on the subject of advancements, and upon this Justice Mclver said: “"We do not see how a slave can be regarded as an advancement when the intestate died after abolition of slavery, whereby slaves lost their attributes as property. It is manifestly impossible to ascertain the value of such an advancement, if advancement it be called. By our act of 1791, corresponding in terms with section 7, oh. LXXXV. Gen. Stat. 440, the value of the advancement is to be estimated at the death of the ancestor, relation being had to its condition at the time of gift. Mo Caw v. JSlewit, 2 McCord Ch. 104. * * * Now, in this case, the intestate having died after the slaves were emancipated, it is clearly impossible to ascertain the value of these slaves by the rule established by the statute, and we are not at liberty to invent any other.” This reasoning is unanswerable, and applies to the case now before the court as strongly as it did to the case in which it was used. The ruling of the court below is sustained as to this point.

As to the second question, Judge Pressley says in his decree, that “ for the year 1867 George Glenn, administrator, rented intestate’s plantation for $500, payable in gold, and at the end of the year charged himself with $500, then received for such rent. About the same time he paid one of the distributees $166 in gold and charged in addition 40 per cent, premium on said payment. It is very clear that the remainder of said gold in his hands, as administrator, is chargeable with a like premium in the absence of all proof by him that he continued to hold said gold for estate purposes, until it depreciated in comparison with currency. The Judge of Probate has so decided, and I sustain him on that point.”

There is nothing objectionable in this. The gold which the administrator received was the property of the estate. It was received by him for the estate; and at the time it was worth forty per cent, more than its nominal value, and the administrator should account for it at that value, unless it was held by him for estate purposes until it depreciated without fault on his part. If it was so held, and had depreciated, he above all others was cognizant of the fact, and it was incumbent on him to make proof thereof, otherwise its original value will be presumed [70]*70against him. This he seems to have understood, as he obtained credit for $166 paid to one of the distributees at the premium of forty per cent. It would not be just to charge him simply with the $500, and then credit him with its disbursement in whole or in part at a premium of forty per cent.

Third. In Rees v. Rees, 11 Rich. Eq. 108, where a mother held a bond against her son, given for eleven slaves, which, previous to her death, he had purchased from her, and which bond the mother destroyed, it was held as an advancement of so much money, and the son was required to account for it as such.

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Related

Ross v. Beacham
33 F. Supp. 3 (W.D. South Carolina, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.C. 64, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-glenn-sc-1883.