Lide v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

4 S.E.2d 263, 191 S.C. 297
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 31, 1939
Docket14928
StatusPublished

This text of 4 S.E.2d 263 (Lide v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.) 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
Lide v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 4 S.E.2d 263, 191 S.C. 297 (S.C. 1939).

Opinion

[298]*298Report oe Special Reeeree

This case comes before me on an order of reference passed by Honorable E. C. Dennis, Judge of the Fourth Judicial Circuit.

In the outset Mr. Mclnnes, one of the attorneys for the plaintiff, moved to amend Paragraph 12 of the complaint by causing the line 4 to read “in the sum of $2849.87, with interest at the legal rate from July 1, 1933,” rather than as it now reads $2,149.87.

To this proposed amendment the defendants’ attorneys objected on the ground, first, that it is intended to change the cause of action, and, second, that the amount between the fiduciary and beneficiary has already been adjudicated and is binding on such fiduciary and beneficiary thereof, but not upon these defendants, and third, that this is a suit on a judgment so held by the Circuit Court and affirmed by the Supreme Court.

The defendants had no previous notices f this motion and I think that at this stage of the proceedings it would not only be unjust to allow the amendment, but would change the entire cause of action and be contrary to the adjudication of the Supreme Court which is the law of this case.

This is a suit on the official bond of Julius S. Mclnnes, a former Judge of Probate for Darlington County, to satisfy a judgment obtained by the plaintiff against his mother, Frances Isham, on an ex parte accounting by Frances Isham had before the present Probate Judge of Darlington County, in which accounting judgment was ordered against Frances Isham in favor of the plaintiff for $2,149.87, dated July 1, 1935, with interest at the legal rate from that date. This judgment was transcripted by the Probate Court and filed [299]*299in the office of the Clerk of Court for Darlington County, execution issued thereon with nulla bona return of the sheriff, after which this action was commenced by the plaintiff against the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland for the amount of this judgment, upon the ground that Julius S. Mclnnes, as Judge of Probate, had failed to require an adequate bond from Frances Isham, the guardian. In this suit Mclnnes intervened and is now a party defendant.

The records in the guardianship proceedings in the office of Probate Judge show the following facts, that on February 5, 1923, Frances Isham by her attorneys, Messrs. Spears and Want, petitioned the Judge of Probate that her son, John Frank Lide, was a minor born November —, 1910; that the said minor had no real or personal property, but as the natural child of Frank M. Lide, deceased, who served in the military force of the United States, is entitled to a monthly allowance from the United States Government in the sum of $20.00; that it was necessary that a guardian be appointed to obtain the said allowance for said minor and to apply the same for his support and maintenance.

Upon this petition, Julius S. Mclnnes appointed Frances Isham guardian for the minor and fixed the amount of the bond at $100.00. There was no law at that time regulating bonds in such -cases and there being no estate to handle by the guardian-mother than the sum of $20.00 per month which was intended for his support and maintenance, I hold that the bond was sufficient. There was no income from the government until March 28, 1924, when she was paid the amount of $791.83 which the guardian showed in her first return filed July 25, 1924.

Frances Isham knew, or was presumed to have known, from the death of Frank M. Lide, that his son John Frank Lide was entitled to receive $20.00 per month from the United States Government for his support as provided in the Act of Congress approved June 25, 1918, 40 Stat., 609. She was a -colored woman without means, with several children dependent upon her daily earnings as a washerwoman [300]*300and cook for the support of'herself and family and under authority as laid down in the case of Rhode v. Tuten, 34 S. C., 496, 497, 13 S. E., 676, had authority .to charge the plaintiff for support from that time.

In' 12 R. C. L-, at page 1157, it is said: “Since one of the chief objects of the guardianship is to assure the application of the ward’s estate to his maintenance and education, reasonable expenditures for these purposes, or an allowance to the guardian for support furnished by himself to an amount which is reasonable in view of the ward’s means, prospects and capacities, are proper credits on the guardian’s account.” Citing Houseal v. Gibbes, Bailey, Eq., 482, 23 Am. Dec., 186. “And the allowance need not invariably be confined to support furnished after the guardian’s appointment, it may include a credit for previous support.”

And there are other high authorities to the same effect. In 28 C. J., 119, it is said: “In the first instance the guardian is the judge of what are necessities for his ward to the same extent that a parent is with respect to his child. Such articles as are proper for the infant’s condition in life, are supplied in the discretion of the guardian, subject to the supervision of the Court in passing his account.” Citing Owens v. Walker, 2 Strob., Eq., 289, where the Court says: “There is no necessity in such case that ‘the supposed indiscretion of the infant’ should be under the protection of the law. The articles are supplied at the discretion of the guardian and subject to the supervision and correction of the Court in passing his accounts.”

And in the case of McRae v. David, 5 Rich. Eq., 475, 477, the Court says: “Every public officer is presumed to have discharged his duties in a proper manner. The onus is upon the -party alleging the contrary of this presumption, to prove his allegations. The defendant has the advantage of this presumption in the commencement of this investigation. And it would not have been sufficient for the plaintiffs to have made a doubtful case against him. The proof must be [301]*301strong enough to produce a conviction, unaccompanied with doubt, that the defendant has committed an official default.”

Judge Mclnnes testified that he thought under the circumstances above outlined that Frances Isham, as guardian, was entitled to charge the minor with support previous to her appointment as guardian and I think that this was true in the above case where the amount of money paid to her on March 28, 1924, considerably more than a year after her appointment, all of which was payable, under the Act of Congress approved June 25, 1918, in $20.00 monthly installments from the date of the death of his father, Frank M. Lide, a little over two years before the appointment of the guardian but from the time that the law provided for the payment. The overwhelming weight of the testimony by Mr. J. A. McLeod, the present Clerk of the Court for Darlington County, and three other witnesses, goes to show that the support furnished the minor at this time by his guardian, who was his mother, was costing her more than $20.00 a month. Each of the guardian’s returns up to the time that Julius S. Mclnnes resigned as Judge of Probate, and was succeeded by his successor, alleged that she had spent a certain amount along with other funds of her own in supporting and contributing to the minor. I, therefore, hold that the guardian was entitled to be reimbursed from the amount collected from the government on March 28, 1924, and that there was no necessity for an increase in the bond at this time.

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Related

Dunbar v. Fant
170 S.E. 460 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1933)
Williams v. Weeks
48 S.E. 619 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1904)
Rhode v. Tuten
13 S.E. 676 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1891)
Reid v. Hood
2 Nott & McC. 168 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1819)

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E.2d 263, 191 S.C. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lide-v-fidelity-deposit-co-sc-1939.