Lord v. Bates

26 S.E. 213, 48 S.C. 95, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 4, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 26 S.E. 213 (Lord v. Bates) 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
Lord v. Bates, 26 S.E. 213, 48 S.C. 95, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 79 (S.C. 1897).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

The State Bank was incorporated as a banking institution prior to the late war. In order to prevent confusion, it may be well to state at the outset, that the State Bank was a private banking corporation, and the Bank of the State was a public corporation established for the benefit of the State. Upon the seige of the city of Charleston, in 1863, the assets of the State Bank were removed to the town of Camden, where, in 1865, they were taken from the agent of the bank, by soldiers in the invading army of General Sherman, then passing through the [97]*97State. In 1869 an act was passed, entitled “An act to enable the banks of the State to renew business or to place them in liquidation.” Prior to the passage of said act, George Garvin, a creditor of the State Bank, filed a creditor’s bill against the president, directors, and company of the State Bank, alleging the insolvency of the bank. In pursuance of the provisions of said act, the attorney general intervened in that cause, and upon his motion an order was made appointing James B. Betts receiver of all the assets of the bank. Among the assets of the bank which were taken from the agent at Camden, as aforesaid, were one hundred bonds of the State of South Carolina, issued in aid of the Blue Ridge Railroad, under an act of the legislature passed in 1854, numbered from 801 to 900, and each of the denomination of $1,000. Nineteen of said bonds had been recovered by the bank before the appointment of said receiver. At the next term of the Court an order was entered, reciting that it was made in pursuance of the act of 1869, aforesaid, whereby the receiver was required by advertisements in the cities of Charleston, Columbia, and New York, to call upon all persons having claims against the bank to present them to him, “on or before 12 M. of Saturday, December 31st, 1870, or be debarred from the benefits of the final settlement of the accounts of the said bank.” This order also enjoined the treasurer from paying either the principal or interest upon any of the eighty-one bonds remaining outstanding to any person except to the said receiver. The receiver was ordered in his advertisements to call upon all persons holding any of these bonds to present the evidence of their right to them, and he was required to report the claim and the evidence of them, at the February term, 1871. A copy of this order was served on the treasurer. Mr. Betts, the receiver, having died, on motion of the attorney general, Benjamin C. Pressley was appointed in his place, February 4, 1876, and Mr. Pressley having been elevated to the bench, on motion of the attorney general, Mr. Samuel Lord was appointed in his place by order [98]*98of the Court, May 4, 1878. Upon entering on his duties as receiver, Mr. Lord discovered that while the order of the 20th of April, 1870, had enjoined the payment of the bonds mentioned, it had not enjoined the funding of them under the conversion act of 1869, or under the consolidation act of 1873, and that in the meanwhile several of these bonds had been funded and were thus lost to the receiver. Another order was thereupon made by the Court on the 30th of July, 1878, enjoining the state treasurer from funding or consolidating any of the remaining outstanding bonds. None of these bonds have been since knowingly funded or paid by the treasurer. Orders for releasing the injunction, and for the funding of specific bonds as they were recovered from time to time, had been made in each instance, until the 23d of November, 1883, when the injunction was modified so as to allow the receiver to fund the bonds recovered by him without further special orders. Sundry more of these bonds having been recovered from time to time, were under the last order funded by the receiver, and the proceeds distributed under orders of the Court. The charter of the State Bank expired in 1874, and was not renewed.

Edward Sebring, president of the bank, died in 1880, leaving Charles Kerrison as sole surviving director and trustee. The original plaintiff, George Garvin, abandoned the conduct of the action. On the — day of June, 1894, a supplemental complaint was filed by Robert Mure and W. I. Middleton, surviving copartners of Robert Mure & Co., and Edward McCrady and Alfred Chisholm, executors of William C. Bee, deceased, against Charles Kerrison, sole surviving director and trustee of the State Bank, and W. T. C. Bates, state treasurer. Both defendants answer the supplemental complaint. On the 29th of June, 1894, his Honor, Judge Witherspoon, made an order by which the case was referred to Wm. Gibbes Whaley, one of the masters for Charleston County, to inquire and report which, if any, of the bonds in question had been funded, and which, if any, were still outstanding, unpaid and unfunded, with [99]*99leave to report any special matter. The master reported that thirty-eight bonds, which he enumerated by their specific serial numbers,“ are still outstanding and unpaid,” and “that the said bonds are the property of the late corporation known as the president, directors and company of the State Bank, and that the receiver of the said corporation is the only person entitled to fund and collect the same from the treasurer of the state.” Upon the hearing of the cause on the 21st August, 1894, the Hon. O. W. Buchanan, attorney general, appearing for the state treasurer, his Honor, Judge Witherspoon, entered an order confirming the report, as follows: “I further find that the said bonds so claimed in the supplemental complaint, and found in the supplemental report to be outstanding and unfunded, to wit: (then follows an enumeration of the bonds) are the property of the president, directors and company of the State Bank, and that the receiver of the said corporation is the only person entitled to fund and collect the same from the treasurer of the State.” From this order there was no appeal.

On the 13th of October, 1894, his Honor, Judge Ernest Gary, made an order, a part of which is as follows: “It is further ordered, that the said Samuel Lord, receiver, be and is hereby authorized and instructed to memorialize the General Assembly, at its next session, to issue to the said Samuel Lord, receiver of the president, directors, and company of the State Bank, the bonds of the State, which, by order of the Court, have been declared to be the property of the State Bank, and to be allowed to refund the same under the acts of the State in such case made and provided.”

The following facts are stated in the return of W. T. C. Bates, state treasurer: That at the regular session of the General Asseembly of the State of South Carolina, in November, A. D. 1894, the relator, as receiver of the president, directors, and company of the State Bank, in obedience to the order of Judge Gary in the cause set forth in the petition, presented to the General Assembly a memorial praying for the passage of a joint resolution authorizing [100]*100the treasurer of the State to issue to him, in settlement and discharge of the said thirty-eight (38) bonds and of the interest accrued thereon, bonds or stocks in accordance with the terms of “An act to reduce the volume of the public debt, and to provide for the payment of the same,” approved 22d December, A. D. 1873, and the acts amendatory thereof, and he be authorized to refund the same, under the provisions of an act, entitled “An act to provide for the redemption of that part of the State debt known as brown consols by the issue of other bonds or stocks,” approved 22d December, A. D. 1892.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Saye , Commissioners
127 S.E. 568 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1925)
Rawl v. McCown
81 S.E. 959 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1914)
State Ex Rel. Watts v. Cain
58 S.E. 937 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)
Ehrlich v. Jennings
58 S.E. 922 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)
State Ex Rel. Rawlinson v. Ansel
57 S.E. 185 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)
Wilson v. Cox
53 S.E. 613 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1906)
Richland Drug Co. v. Moorman
50 S.E. 792 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1905)
Milster v. City of Spartanburg
46 S.E. 539 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.E. 213, 48 S.C. 95, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-bates-sc-1897.