Lowry v. Jackson

3 S.E. 473, 27 S.C. 318, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 6, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 3 S.E. 473 (Lowry v. Jackson) 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
Lowry v. Jackson, 3 S.E. 473, 27 S.C. 318, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 137 (S.C. 1887).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McIver.

Inasmuch as the questions presented by this appeal arise under a demurrer, a brief statement of the pleadings becomes necessary. The allegations of the complaint are substantially as follows: 1st. That said Alexander May made his note under seal to said Alfred M. Lowry, dated 29th of December, 1859, and payable one day after date, for the sum of forty-eight 91-100 dollars. 2nd. That Alexander May died intestate sometime in the year 1860, seized and possessed of certain real estate, and that letters of administration upon his estate were duly committed to the defendant, Jackson. 3rd. That there was a judgment for a large sum of money against said Alexander May, remaining unpaid at the time of his death, and that, owing to the destruction of the records in March, 1865, it has long since been impossible to ascertain what amount of assets went into the hands of said Jackson, as administrator as aforesaid, although in response to repeated demands, made by said Alfred M. Lowry in his life-time, upon said Jackson for payment of said note, the said Jackson always declared that the aforesaid judgment was more than sufficient to exhaust all the personal assets of the estate of said Alexander May. 4th. That judgments for large amounts have been recovered against said Jackson individually, which are still unpaid, and his property liable to execution is wholly insufficient for the payment thereof, and that the said Jackson is believed to be wholly insolvent. 5th. That said Alexander May left surviving him, as his heirs at law, his widow Susannah, and his two children, Peter and the defendant, Mary, who has since intermarried with the defendant, David T. Redfearn. 6th. That sometime in the year 1861, the said Peter May died intestate, leaving as his sole heirs at law, his mother, Susannah, and his sister, the defendant, Mary, and that the said Susannah died intestate in 1875, leaving as her sole heir at law the defendant, Mary, and administration of her personal estate has been duly committed to the defendant, Mulloy. 7th. That the land of which the said Alexander May died seized consisted of two tracts — one in the State of North Carolina, and the other in South Carolina, Chesterfield County, of which a particular description is given, and that the South Carolina tract largely [320]*320exceeds in value the amount now due on the said note, and that there never has been any partition of the same. 8th. That after the death of said Alexander May his above named heirs at law held and occupied the said land as tenants in common until the death of Peter, when the same was held in common by the said Susannah and the defendant, Mary, with her husband, until the death of said Susannah, since which time it has been in the possession of the defendants, Mary Redfearn and David T. Redfearn. 9th. That Alfred M. Lowry died intestate in 1877, and administration of his pei-sonal estate has been duly committed to the plaintiff. 10th. That no part of the said note has been paid. 11th. That the judgment obtained against Alexander May in his life-time, hereinbefore mentioned, has been paid by lapse of time, if not otherwise, and, so far as known to plaintiff, there is now no other debt due by the estate of Alexander May remaining unpaid, except the note hereinbefore mentioned. Wherefore the plaintiff demanded judgment against the said Mary HI Redfeaim and her husband, David T. Redfearn, for the amount due on said note, on account of the real estate descended to the said Mary and now in the possession of herself and husband. 2nd. That said tract of land be sold and the proceeds thereof be applied to such judgment, and the costs of these proceedings. 3rd. For general relief.

To this complaint the defendants, Jackson, as administrator as aforesaid, and Redfearn and wife, filed a joint demurrer, upon the following grounds: 1st. Because there is a defect of parties defendant, in that Redfearn and wife are in no way liable on the note sued upon. 2nd. That “several causes of action have been improperly united, in that plaintiff brings her action to recover against the defendant, Stephen Jackson, as administrator, on a note alleged to have been executed to her intestate by the intestate of said Jackson, and in the same action seeks to recover against the defendants, Mary II. Redfearn and David T. Redfearn, the amount of the said note, on the ground that they are in possession of lands of the estate of the intestate of said Jackson — the last cause of action being one which does not arise out of the same transaction as that against the defendant, Jackson, as administrator as aforesaid, nor out of transactions connected [321]*321with the same subject of action, and being none of those which by law may be united in the same complaint therewith.” 3rd. Because “the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against these defendants, Mary H. Redfearn and David T. Redfearn, in that there is no allegation of any promise, undertaking, contract, agreement, obligation, or liability, express or implied, in law or in equity, to pay the amount of the note sued upon.”

The Circuit Judge overruled the demurrer, with leave to the defendants to answer within twenty days upon the payment of the costs which had accrued up to that time, and the defendants appealed substantially upon the grounds set out in the demurrer, as well as upon the additional grounds, that David T. Redfearn was in no view of the case a proper party, and that the judge erred in attaching, as a condition precedent of the leave to answer, the requirement that defendants should pay the costs.

It is clear that the first ground of demurrer — for defect of parties defendant — -cannot be sustained, even if it be conceded that the two Redfearns webe not proper parties. Defect of parties, as the word imports, means too few and not too many. Hence, as is said in Pomeroy on Remedies, section 206: “A demurrer alleging this particular objection can only be interposed, therefore, in case of-a wora-joinder of necessary parties plaintiffs or defendants, and never in case of a mis-joinder. The word ‘defect’ is taken in its literal sense of ‘deficiency,’ and not in a broader sense as meaning any error in the selection of parties. Upon this point the courts are nearly unanimous.” In fact, as it appears from the note (3) to section 287, this construction is now universal, as the case in Wisconsin which held the contrary has since been overruled, and the court in that State is now in harmony with all the other States.

As to the second ground of demurrer, it seems to us to be based upon a misconception of the complaint. For it does not there appear that the plaintiff claims to have any cause of action against Jackson as administrator, nor is any judgment against him demanded. It is true that some of the facts stated in the complaint would constitute a cause of action against the administrator, but it is manifest that those facts are stated, not for the [322]*322purpose of furnishing a basis for a cause of action against the administrator, but for the purpose of showing that the plaintiff has a cause of action against Mary H. Redfearn and David T; Redfearn, by reason of the fact that the land of the deceased debtor has descended to the said Mary as his heir, and that she, with her husband, is now in possession of the same; and the fact that there may be allegations in the complaint not necessary to support such a cause of action, does not, render it amenable to the objection that two causes of action have been improperly united.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 S.E. 473, 27 S.C. 318, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-v-jackson-sc-1887.