Parks v. McDaniel

54 S.E. 801, 75 S.C. 7, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 24, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 54 S.E. 801 (Parks v. McDaniel) 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
Parks v. McDaniel, 54 S.E. 801, 75 S.C. 7, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 2 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

Mrs. Sallie E. McDaniel, late of Edg'eñeld County, S. C., died in November, 1901, leaving a will under which defendant, Winchester McDaniel, qualified as executor, which, after providing for the payment of funeral and other expenses incident to the settlement of her estate and bequeathing some specific articles, of personal property, bequeathed and devised the remainder of her estate, real and personal, to Mrs. Josie Parks, the plaintiff, and Mrs. Lillie Thurmond. Mrs-. Parks, having purchased the interest of Mrs. Thurmond in said estate, brought this action against the executor for an accounting and alleges that in such accounting the said executor should be refused credit for the amount paid by him, $560.76, in settlement of a judgment for said sum recovered against him as executor in favor of J. J. Burch on the ground that he “negligently and with total indifference to the interest of the estate and in. utter disregard oif his duty as executor,” permitted judgment by default to be recovered for a sum largely in excess of what the estate was indebted to the said J. J. -Burch. The action resulted in the following decree:

“The only issue in this case is the right of defendant to credit for some $560.76, alleged to' have been paid by him to one J. J. Burch in satisfaction of a judgment recovered by Burch against the defendant as executor of the will of Sallie E. McDaniel. It is not denied that the defendant’s *9 allowance of the judgment against him was an act of negligence. He did not contest its justice when he ought to have done so. And now he must show its justice in this action.
“The account is separated into two parts-, that for January, February, March, April and June, 1901, rendered in-South Carolina, and aggregating $256, after a credit of $100; and that for April and May, 1901, rendered in Georgia, aggregating $274.25.
“The first account is not allowable, under the South Carolina statute.
“The second account is discredited, on its -face. For thirty-three days’ service this doctor charged $274.25. Only a very small part of that was for medicine. The far greater part of it was for ‘extra attention.’ The items thus characterized must be eliminated; there is no sufficient testimony to sustain them. It is enough to allow the charges described as ‘visits and mileage,’ and those for medicine.
“Let the master make the calculation and report the account due. It is so ordered.”

1 The general rule undoubtedly is that where one accepts the trust, of an executor he must manage the estate committed to him' with the same care and diligence that a prudent and cautious person would bestow on his own concerns, and consequently is liable for losses to the estate due to his negligence. Taveau v. Ball, 1 McCord Eq., 464; Glover v. Glover, McM. Eq., 153; Sollee v. Croft, 7 Rich. Eq., 46; 3 Williams Executors, 6 Am. ed., 1805; 11 Ency. Law, 911. While ordinarily a fiduciary voluntarily paying a claim against the estate in his- charge is fully protected by being subrogated to the rights- of claimant, still a court of equity may protect him; in the payment of an invalid claim if satisfied that he has acted under the circumstances as a prudent person would do in managing his own affairs. This applies to voluntary payments, but' when a payment is made pursuant to the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction against the fiduciary, it is *10 not the voluntary act of the fiduciary, but a compliance with a mandate of the court under compulsion. When such a payment is assailed the question is- not merely whether the fiduciary was negligent in the conduct of the suit leading to the judgment, but whether he acted in such bad faith towards his trust or in such utter disregard of his duty as would warrant a court in setting aside the judgment or in depriving him of any equitable right to be subrogated to the position of the judgment creditor, or in treating the judgment as of no avail as a protection for its payment. In such case the burden of proof is upon the party assailing the payment of the judgment, at least to show the invalidity of the claim, and that the judgment was the result of the fiduciary’s breach of duty.

In the case of Tompkins v. Tompkins, 18 S. C., 1, it was sought to prevent the executors from being allowed credit for payment on a judgment against them' in favor of Jennings, Smith & Co., on the ground that said judgmer: was not authorized by law and was irregular, null and void. The Circuit Court disposed of the contention bv saying at page 15: “It was no part of the inquiry referred to the referee to' try the validity of the judgment. It was found that the executors paid it in good faith, they regarded it as a valid claim- and it was certainly binding on the estate until it was set aside.” Responding to an exception taken to this "ruling, the Supreme Court, at page 28, said: “We sec no error in the conclusion reached by the Circuit Judge in reference to this matter. Even though there may have been technical informalities in this judgment, yet there is no evidence that the debt on which the judgment was recovered was not a valid claim against the estate which has been extinguished by the executors, and they, therefore, should have credit for the amount -paid by them.” In 11 Ency. Law, 911, the case of Cameron v. Morris, 83 Tex., 14, is cited to sustain the proposition that a payment under an order of court, in the absence of fraud, is not a breach of duty and the executor or administrator is not liable for the *11 amount paid though the claim was invalid. In Harrison v. Turnbull, 95 Va., 701, 41 L. R. A., 703, it was held that a decree establishing the claims against a decedent’s estate and ordering sale of real estate to pay them is a complete bar to an action against the executor for a devastavit, the complaint not impeaching the judgment of fraud.

If we grant that the judgment paid by the executor in this case is not final and conclusive as against all in privby with the executor, in determining the validity Of the claim as indebtedness due to J. J. B.urch by the estate, but that it is only prima facie evidence of the justice of the claim and its payment, it is manifest that it was a fundamental error in the Circuit Court to hold that it was incumbent on the executor to show the validity and justice of the claim, whereas he should have held that it was incumbent On the plaintiff to show the contrary. Let us, therefore, consider the evidence with the burden of proof properly placed and in view of the judgment against the executor.

2 The account disallowed in tota by the Circuit Court was for medical services rendered and medicines- furnished to the testatrix by Dr. J. J. Burch ift South Carolina from January 5 to April 12, 1901, aggregating, after a credit of $100, a balance of $256. This account was disallo-wed under the statutes, section-1112, et seq.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.E. 801, 75 S.C. 7, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-mcdaniel-sc-1906.