Jackson v. Walters

144 S.E.2d 422, 246 S.C. 486, 1965 S.C. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 6, 1965
Docket18406
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 144 S.E.2d 422 (Jackson v. Walters) 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
Jackson v. Walters, 144 S.E.2d 422, 246 S.C. 486, 1965 S.C. LEXIS 236 (S.C. 1965).

Opinion

Bussey, Justice.

In this equitable action plaintiff-respondent sought to set aside a certain real estate mortgage, and the note secured thereby, on the ground, inter alia, of want of consideration. The note and mortgage were dated September 19, 1964, and were in the amount of $4,200, together with interest at six per cent per annum, payable one day after demand, both instruments being executed in favor of Anne J. Walters (as parent and general guardian of Leila Lane Walters, a minor). The mortgage is under seal and the execution and delivery of the instruments by the respondent is admitted.

The appellant, Mrs. Walters, is the mother of the minor, Leila Lane Walters, aged 13 at the time of the trial below, and the respondent, Mrs. Jackson, is the mother of Mrs. Walters.

The controversy here had its origin in a legacy in favor of the said minor, contained in a codicil to the will of Mrs. Ida Beaty Lewis, who died in 1955, said will and codicil being dated March 6, 1953. Mrs. Lewis was no blood relation to Mrs. Jackson, but was a third or fourth cousin of Mrs. Jackson’s husband, and lived with Mrs. Jackson for some four years prior to her death. In her will Mrs. Lewis specifically devised to Mrs. Jackson a farm tract of land in Anderson County. She bequeathed to six named nieces and nephews the sum of $500 each. Mrs. Jackson and Harold Major, a member of the Anderson Bar, were appointed as executrix and executor of the will. The pertinent portion of the codicil reads as follows:

“I will, bequest and devise to Lelia Lane Walters the sum of $2,500, and direct that it be used for her education. I direct that the same be paid over to Irma C. Jackson as guardian for Leila Lane Walters to use the money as herein directed.”

Both Mr. Major and Mrs. Jackson qualified and, according to the testimony of Mrs. Jackson, she largely left the *490 administration of the estate to Mr. Major, but did sign checks drawn on an estate bank account. Long before the inception of this litigation in the year 1964, Mr. Major died and, following the death of Mr. Major, Mrs. Jackson engaged the services of T. Sloan Bannister, another member of the Anderson Bar, who also died several years ago. Prior to the commencement of this litigation, no accounting had ever been filed in the Probate Court of Anderson County, and apparently no records of either Mr. Major or Mr. Bannister appertaining to the estate of Mrs. Lewis were available upon the trial.

Prior to the execution of the note and mortgage involved in this action, all assets of the estate of Mrs. Lewis were exhausted, without any provision having been made for the payment, or setting aside, of the legacy in favor of the minor, Leila Lane Walters, hereinabove mentioned. The tract of real estate specifically devised to, Mrs. Jackson was first mortgaged by her, and was afterwards sold, said tract of land being apparently the most valuable asset of the estate.

Mrs. Jackson is a woman in her late sixties. She is a woman of considerable business experience, having, among other things, been a partner in a loan company and owned and operated a restaurant, her recent business ventures, at least, not being too successful. Upon the date when the note and mortgage were executed, she apparently was possessed of no assets of any consequence, except her home, which was already subject to a mortgage, the mortgage in controversy here being a second mortgage thereupon. While there is some dispute in the evidence as to the circumstances attendant upon the execution of the note and mortgage in litigation, it is quite apparent that the parties intended to thereby secure the ultimate payment of such amount of money as the minor Lelia Lane Walters might be legally entitled to the benefit of by virtue of the legacy from Mrs. Lewis.

The face amount of the note and mortgage, in the sum of $4,200, was arrived at by taking the legacy in favor of the *491 minor, in the amount of $2,500, and calculating thereupon, approximately, compound interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of testatrix’s death, and then rounding off such figure.

The case was tried before the Honorable Ernest B. Castles, Judge of the County Court of Anderson, without a jury. From the evidence adduced upon the trial, it would appear that the assets of Mrs. Lewis’ estate, aside from the tract of land specifically devised to Mrs. Jackson, were insufficient to pay her debts, testamentary expenses and the various legacies in full. As above mentioned, no records of either of the attorneys involved were available and Mrs. Jackson had no complete record herself. From what records and information she had, and the estate bank -account, she and her present counsel of record apparently did the best they could under the circumstances to reconstruct just what had happened with respect to the assets of the estate. From this reconstruction, it would appear, and the county judge found as a fact, that there was available only $3,067.03 for the payment of the pecuniary legacies, which totaled $5,500, with the result of the minor Leila Lane Walters being entitled to benefit of a prorated legacy in the amount of $1,394.-10.

While the appellant objected to the introduction of a part of the evidence upon which the foregoing calculations, and findings of the county judge were based, we do not understand the appellant to contend either that the calculations were substantially incorrect, or that testatrix was possessed of any assets not included therein.

It further clearly appears that the six nieces and nephews of Mrs. Lewis were each paid their legacies of $500 in full, totaling the sum of $3,000. Precisely why this was done does not clearly appear in the evidence.

There is nothing in the will indicating any intent on the part of the testatrix to charge the real estate specifically devised to Mrs. Jackson with the payment *492 of any of the cash legacies, and, in the absence of any such language in the will, the real estate was not so chargeable. See Mack v. Stanley, 190 S. C. 300, 2 S. E. (2d) 792, and cases therein cited. The record reflects that the proceeds of the mortgage given by respondent on the specifically devised real estate were either inadvertently or for convenience deposited in the estate bank account, and afterwards, withdrawn by respondent. Such fact, however, would not make such proceeds chargeable with the payment of the pecuniary legacies.

The county judge held that the note and mortgage here in question were void on the ground that such were without consideration; and ordered the same canceled. His order also approved a plan of security of payment, volunteered by the respondent, of the amount he found to be due the minor by way of a prorated legacy, which plan will hereafter be adverted to in more detail.

Appellant’s exceptions are eleven in number, and they collectively occupy some nine pages of the printed transcript of record. There is at least grave doubt as to whether any of such exceptions are sufficiently in compliance with the provisions of Section 6 of Rule 4 of this court, to merit any consideration by this court. Basically involved, however, in this litigation are the rights of the minor, Leila Lane Walters, who is not a party to this action.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.E.2d 422, 246 S.C. 486, 1965 S.C. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-walters-sc-1965.