Moore v. Hood

30 S.C. Eq. 311
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 30 S.C. Eq. 311 (Moore v. Hood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Hood, 30 S.C. Eq. 311 (S.C. Ct. App. 1857).

Opinions

[323]*323The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Wardlaw, Ch.

The objection to the jurisdiction of the Court, presented by the third ground of appeal, lacks even plausibility. The suit is for account by wards against their guardian and his surety, who had also been executors of the estate from which the property of the plaintiffs now in controversy was derived; and account is one of the most general heads of jurisdiction in this Court, and most commonly exercised, as in the present instance, in suits by beneficiaries against trustees. It is immaterial that the trustee here was invested with his powers and duties by a foreign tribunal; for surely his fiduciary relation is not terminated by removal of himself and the trust funds beyond the limits of the State in which he was appointed. It would disgrace the Courts of any civilized country to afford immunity to a trustee who fled to their jurisdiction that he might embezzle the funds committed to his trust. This suit is not on the bond of defendants as the git, such as an action of debt which can be prosecuted only in the Court of Common Pleas: it is a bill for account, in which the bond is used merely as collateral evidence of the defendant’s liability.

The second ground of appeal affirms that the order for sale of the slaves was granted by a Court in North Carolina which had jurisdiction of the subject according to the laws of that State; and that the sale was made according to these laws, and should be treated as valid by foreign tribunals.

It sufficiently appears, that the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions which granted this order has jurisdiction of the subject under the law of North Carolina; but no proof is offered that by the procedure of that Court a guardian on his single petition can obtain lawful authority to sell the slaves of his ward, nor indeed that the law of that State affecting the questions of this case differs from the law of South Carolina. If such proof had been made, we might have recognized and followed the law and procedure loci contractus, but [324]*324in the absence of such proof we are left to the lights within onr territory, and must decide the case as if the order had been granted by a Court of this State of competent jurisdiction. It is fairly presumed that States denying their institutions from a common origin proceed on tlie same principles of adjudication and attain the same conclusions, unless changes by legislation or decisions be shown. Heidvs. Lamar, 1 Strob. Eq. 38-9. Putting aside this fact of common origin, every Court necessarily pursues its own rules and doctrines for the interpretation and execution of contracts and judgments, although made or pronounced in a foreign country, where the evidence exhibits no difference concerning the subject in the law of the foreign country. No other mode' of decision is rational'and practicable.

In equity the general rule is that all persons, whether adults or infants, shall be made parties to a suit who are materially interested in the object of the suit and the questions to be therein decided. As between trustees and beneficiaries all of both classes are necessary parties generally, although an exception is tolerated in suits by beneficiaries where one of several trustees is pursued for his particular breach of trust; and exceptions are allowed in suits by trustees, first where the object of the suit is merely to obtain from some third person possession of the trust property, and it is indifferent to the equitable claimants whether the trustees succeed or fail, and secondly, where the trustees fully represent the beneficiaries. The last exception is the only one requiring consideration in this case. The -most familiar instance of this exception is in suits by or against executors and administrators concerning the personalty, as to which they are by law the owners and the representatives of the legatees and distributees ; and usually in such suits the rights of the beneficiaries are held to be sufficiently represented and their interests protected in the names and persons of their said trustees: Sto. Eq. PL sec. 207, 208; Calvert on Part. 8, 20, 207, 315.

[325]*325The rule requiring beneficiaries to be parties where they are interested in the questions for adjudication is applicable although the trustees have the legal title, for trustees are not the real owners of the trust estate, and are rather agents of the beneficiaries for the execution of certain trusts, and it is among their duties to require the real owners to be brought before the Court. Holland vs. Balter, 2 Hare, 624 ; 3 Hare, 68. Of course the rule is more vigorously exacted where trustees have not the legal title of the trust estate. It was adjudged in Bailey vs. Patterson, 3 Rich. Eq. 156, and recognized in Gasón vs. Long, 4 Rich. Eq. 60, that a guardian has not the legal title of his ward’s chattels, and that his sale of them is voidable at the option of the ward. Long ago it was decided in Inwood vs. Twyne, Amb. 41; 2 Eden 148, that a guardian could uot change the character of his ward’s estate, without the authority or sanction of the Court; and this doctrine was recognized in Oapehart vs. Huey, 1 Hill, Ch., 409. In my opinion alienation by a guardian of his ward’s chattels, under an order obtained on his ex parte application, is not materially distinguishable from his private, self-moved alienation. On such application the Court does not properly pronounce any judgment, and simply expresses a professional opinion, assuming the truth of a one-sided statement of facts which may mislead. Suppose Cne formerly guardian should obtain an improvident order from the Court on his single petition for the sale of his late ward’s chattels, after the ward had obtained full age, upon some showing, apparently strong,.that a sale was necessary for the convenience of settlement, or other reason, none would contend that the owner would be barred by the plea of res judicata ; and surely infants, a class peculiarly within the protection of the Court, are entitled to as benignant relief as adults in the same circumstances. In the case supposed, the fiduciary relation would not be terminated until full and fair settlement between the guardian and [326]*326adult ward; and tlie case of an infant seems to be stronger where trust and disability concur in his behalf.

It is argued that the order of the Court in this case is in effect a mere direction to a trustee concerning the management of his trust, and that in such applications for direction and advice guardians sufficiently represent their wards. This reasoning proceeds on misapprehension of the facts. Management of an estate implies its administration in its existing state ; but the order here affected the corpus of the estate and a change of its nature. Authorities have already been cited to show that a guardian is not legal owner and cannot change the nature of his ward’s estate without judicial leave obtained in a regular suit where the real owner may be heard. Again, the Court owes the duty of determining the rights of litigants when presented by regular pleading, and has the power of compelling parties to execute its decrees; but it is under no obligation to bestow professional counsel on those who may solicit advice, however earnestly, in violation of the rules of practice, and cannot enforce its opinions upon persons unrepresented in a controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.C. Eq. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-hood-scctapp-1857.