Gullick, Probate Judge v. Slaten

168 S.E. 697, 169 S.C. 244, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 22, 1933
Docket13606
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 S.E. 697 (Gullick, Probate Judge v. Slaten) 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
Gullick, Probate Judge v. Slaten, 168 S.E. 697, 169 S.C. 244, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 100 (S.C. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Ci-iiEE Justice Bee ase.

On June 12, 1925, Mrs. Mattie S. Clark, widow of W. A. Clark, who by a second marriage became Mrs. Mattie S. Slaten, one of the defendants in this action, was appointed by the Probate Court of Greenville County as guardian of the estate of her minor son, Joe Vance Clark, one of the plaintiffs in the cause. There immediately came into the hands of the guardian, for the benefit of her ward, the sum of $2,203.06. This amount, and other funds of Mrs. Slaten and money she borrowed, were used for the purchase of certain real estate in the City of Greenville, called the Houston Street property, and the title to the property was taken by Mrs. Slaten in her own name alone.

Being unable to obtain a personal or corporate surety on her guardianship bond, Mrs. Slaten executed in favor of the then Probate Judge of Greenville County a first mortgage on the Plouston Street property to secure the payment of the sum of $2,203.06, the amount due by her, as guardian to her ward, and the mortgage was promptly recorded. The mortgage recited that it was given “in lieu of personal bondsmen,” and “to indemnify said estate, and to secure it from all damage and loss by reason of any failure on my part to faithfully and well discharge all of the duties of said guardianship and conditions of my said bond.”

Contemporaneously Mrs. Slaten executed to the American Bank & Trust Company a second mortgage on the Houston Street property for $3,000.00, the balance of the purchase price of the property purchased by her.

*247 On June 25, 1927, Mrs. Slaten borrowed from Mrs. Nell M. Doster the sum of $3,500.00, and to secure the payment of that amount executed a mortgage on the Houston Street property.

The then Probate Judge of Greenville County waived, in writing, the lien of the mortgage held by the Probate Judge in favor of the mortgage of Mrs. Doster, and the instrument to that effect was duly recorded on June 30, 1927.

On October 16, 1928, Mrs. Slaten secured a loan from the defendant Carolina Doan & Trust Company, and executed to that company a mortgage over the Houston Street property to secure the payment of $4,200.00. The Doster mortgage was paid from this loan and satisfaction acknowledged on October 16, 1928, but the satisfaction was not recorded until June 27, 1929.

The mortgage to the American Bank & Trust Company was marked satisfied, and the satisfaction entered of record on October 16, 1928, by the American Loan & Investment Company, successor to the original mortgagee.

The mortgage to the Probate Judge given by Mrs. Slaten to secure her bond as guardian was marked satisfied by the Probate Judge on October 16, 1928, and, presumably, the satisfaction was entered of record on that day. The bond so secured was marked canceled, and record of the cancellation entered in the office of the Probate Judge.

On October 16, 1928, the day of the satisfaction of the mortgage held by the Probate Judge, and the cancellation of the first bond, there was filed with, and accepted by, that official a new guardianship bond on the part of Mrs. Slaten and the defendant American Employers’ Insurance Company, as surety, the bond being dated October 11, 1928.

Carolina Loan & Trust Company thereafter entered suit for foreclosure of its mortgage, executed by Mrs. Slaten, and as a result of that suit the Houston Street property was sold and purchased by Carolina Loan & Trust Company, and that company obtained deed thereto from the master.

*248 The plaintiff Joe Vance Clark, having reached his maturity, Mrs. Slaten, the guardian, filed her petition in the Probate Court of Greenville County for final accounting, settlement, and discharge. After due legal advertisement, a hearing on the application for discharge was had on April 23, 1931. The defendant, the surety company, it appears, was not notified of this hearing, and was not represented thereat. The present Probate Judge refused to grant the requested discharge, on the ground that no satisfactory accounting had been made by the guardian, and it appears held that the guardian was due to her ward the sum of $2,-203.06, the money which originally came into her hands, with interest thereon from June 12, 1925, at the legal rate. Demand for payment for the amount found to be due by the guardian was made on the defendant the surety company, but payment was refused.

The present Probate Judge of Greenville County, Mr. Gullick, and the ward, Joe Vance Clark, thereupon entered this suit ag'ainst Mrs. Slaten, the guardian, and the surety company for the recovery of the amount alleged to be due the ward by the guardian. Many of the matters to which we have referred were set forth in the complaint.

In addition, it was charged in the complaint that Mrs. Slaten had violated her duties as guardian, had wasted and dissipated the estate of her ward, made unwise and unauthorized investments of the funds of the estate, dealt with the same for her own benefit, failed to sell the property purchased by her with the funds of her ward when the value of the property was sufficient to pay the indebtedness thereon and to replace the ward’s funds, and, generally, that she had not properly accounted for the estate of the ward, and, accordingly, that the bond executed by Mrs. Slaten, as guardian, with the defendant surety company, as surety, had been breached.

In its answer, the defendant surety company denied liability. It alleged that the guardian had defaulted before the *249 execution of the bond by it, and had fraudulently induced the surety company to become surety on the bond, so as to enable her to "secure cancellation of the mortgage held by the Probate Judge as security for the original guardianship bond, all of which was done for the purpose of obtaining the loan from the Carolina Loan & Trust Company; that the Probate Judge had no authority to cancel the mortgage held as security; that the investment of the guardianship money in the Houston .Street property was a default, and for that reason the surety company was not liable; and that any liability rested primarily on the Houston Street property, and no liability should rest upon the surety company until after the Houston Street property had been exhausted. It was alleged, also, that the Carolina Loan & Trust Company was a proper and necessary party to the action, ánd should be brought in.

The surety company further alleged that Mrs. Slaten had properly expended more than $2,000.00 for the support, maintenance, and education of her minor son and ward during- his minority, and that the surety company was entitled to an offset for these expenditures, as well as for the lawful commissions due to Mrs. Slaten as guardian.

The defendant Carolina Loan & Trust Company, having-been made a party to the action, denied liability on any account, alleging that it had no knowledge of any claim of the Probate Judge, or of the plaintiff Joe Vance Clark, on the Houston Street property; that it should be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees, whose mortgages had been paid with the proceeds of the loan it had made to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.E. 697, 169 S.C. 244, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gullick-probate-judge-v-slaten-sc-1933.