Hopkins v. McLure

133 U.S. 380, 10 S. Ct. 407, 33 L. Ed. 660, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1920
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 3, 1890
Docket126
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 133 U.S. 380 (Hopkins v. McLure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. McLure, 133 U.S. 380, 10 S. Ct. 407, 33 L. Ed. 660, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1920 (1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatcheord

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 9th of July, 1876, George W. Melton died, intestate and insolvent, in South Carolina, leaving surviving him his widow, Margaret A. Melton, and three infant children. John J. McLure was appointed administrator of his estate, and commenced an action in the Circuit Court of Chester County, South Carolina, in July, 1877, to marshal the assets of the estate, to have the real property of the deceased sold in aid of assets, and to have the creditors of the estate establish their deifiands. . The creditors were called in, and numerous claims were established, among them, a .note under seal to R.. G. Ratchford & Co., bearing date February 22, 1859 ; a note under seal to Dr. A. P. Wylie, bearing'date May 3, 1872; a note under seal to Samuel D Melton, bearing date February 1, 1871; a bond secured by a mortgage on real estate to one Duvall, sheriff, datfed June 4, 1875, which had been transferred to one Kerr, as clerk" of the court of Fairfield County, South Carolina; and *381 a bond secured by a mortgage on real estate to Hopkins, Dwight & Co., dated May 19, 1876. The widow and the infant children, and various creditors of the deceased were made defendants.' The case was referred to a special referee,who reported that the assets of the estate could not exceed $11,000 ; that the amount due on the mortgage to Duvall, sheriff, was $1087.35, and the amount due on the mortgage to Hopkins, Dwight & Co. was $30,748.44; and that there were debts on sealed notes and specialties dated prior to November 25,1873, amounting to $7005.04, and debts on simple contracts amounting to $36,415.98, the total of the three classes of debts being $75,256.81. The special referee reported that, after the payment of the costs, the assets were applicable first to the satisfaction of the bond and mortgage to Duvall, sheriff, and next to the bond and mortgage to Hopkins, Dwight & Co. Exceptions were filed by various creditors to the report of the referee, and the case was heard by the Circuit Court.

It appeared that the mortgage to Hopkins, Dwight & Co. had been foreclosed by a judicial sale of the land covered by it; that the proceeds of the sale were insufficient to pay the debt; that the debt and the mortgage were set up as a preferred claim against the general assets in the- hands of the administrator; that the land covered by the mortgage held by Kerr as, clerk was sold under an order of the court before Kerr became a party to the suit by proving his debt and mortgage; that, after that sale, Kerr, not having obtained -its proceeds, instituted proceedings to foreclose the mortgage, obtained judgment, and sold the land, but the proceeds of sale were insufficient to pay the mortgage debt; and that Kerr set up the debt as a preferred one against the general assets of the estate.

The Circuit Court said, in its opinion, that the referee held that both of these debts were preferred claims, on the authority of the case of Edwards v. Sanders, 6 So. Car. 316; and it discussed the question whether the mortgage debt of Hopkins, Dwight & Go. was a'preferred claim after its specific lien had been exhausted, because it was a mortgage.

Section 26 of the act of South Carolina, which became a law *382 March 13,1789, being act No. 1455, entitled “ An act directing the manner of granting probates of wills and letters of administration, and for other purposes therein mentioned,” (Stat. at L. of So. Car. 1839, v. 5, p. Ill,) provided as follows : “ That the debts due by any testator or intestate shall be paid by executors or administrators in fche order following, viz.: funeral and other expenses of the last sickness, charges of probate of will or of the letters of administration; next, debts due to the public; next, judgments, mortgages and executions, the oldest first; next, rent; then, bonds or other obligations; and lastly, debts due on open accounts; but no preference whatever shall be given to creditors in equal degree, where there is a deficiency of assets, except in the cases of judgments, mortgages that shall be recorded from the time of recording, and executions lodged in the sheriff’s office, the oldest of which shall be first paid, or in those cases where a creditor may have a lien on any particular part of the estate.”

This provision was construed by the Constitutional Court of South Carolina, in 1822,- in the case of Tunno v. Happoldt, 2 McCord, 188. In that case, the deceased left an outstanding “ obligation or sealed instrument of mortgage and covenant ” and some outstanding simple contract debts. The question arose whether that instrument was to be ranked, in the legal order of payment under the statute, among bond debts or among simple contract debts. The court said that the claim was by simple contract, that is, by a note; that the question was whether the mortgage deed could change the character of the note, or give it a preference over other simple contract debts under the statute; that the simple contract debt was not changed by the mortgage; "and tkát the deed gave a particular lien .upon certain property, but its object and intent had terminated, and otherwise left the note as it stood before, still a simple contract. ■

In Kinard v. Young, 2 Rich. Eq. 247, in the Court of Appeals in Equity and Court of Errors of South Carolina, in 1846, it was held that, in the administration of the assets of an insolvent testator or. intestate, mortgages, as mortgages, were not entitled to priority over rent, specialties, and simple con *383 tract debts, except so far as they were liens on any particular part of the estate, and. that, after the lien was exhausted, the grade of the demand must be determined by the nature of the instrument which the mortgage was given to secure; the court following the decision in Tunno v. Happoldt.

The provision of the act of 1789 was incorporated in 1872 in the Revised Statutes of South Carolina, as section 3 of chapter 90, p. 457, as follows: “ The assets which come to the hands of an executor or .administrator, after proper allowancé to the executor or administrator, in a due course of administration, shall be applied to the payment of his debts in the following order, that is to say: 1. Funeral and other expenses of the last sickness, charges of probate or letters of administration; 2. Debts due to the public; 3. Judgments, mortgages, and executions — the oldest first; 4. Rent; 5. Bonds and debts by specialty; 6. Debts by simple contract.”

In 1875, the case of Edwards v. Sanders, 6 So. Car. 316, was decided by the Supreme Court of the State.

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Bluebook (online)
133 U.S. 380, 10 S. Ct. 407, 33 L. Ed. 660, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-mclure-scotus-1890.