Phillips v. Yon

39 S.E. 618, 61 S.C. 426, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 170
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 618 (Phillips v. Yon) 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
Phillips v. Yon, 39 S.E. 618, 61 S.C. 426, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 170 (S.C. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the Gourt was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

The record contains 'the statement that this action was commenced by the plaintiffs on the 25th day of November, 1896, against Benjamin A. Yon, as guardian of the plaintiffs, Minerva C. Phillips, Frances A. Corbett, Allen U. Jeffooat, and of their brother, Paul D. Jeff-coat, who died before the commen'cemei|t of this action. The widow and adult Children of Paul D. Jeffcoat, deceased, are made parties plaintiffs, and the minor children are made defendants. After the commencement of the action, the defendant, Benjamin A. Yon, died, leaving of force his last will and testament, which was dul-y admitted to probate, and Ollin C. Salley and Holly J. Salley, the-executors therein named, qualified and are now such executors. The summons and complaint of the plaintiffs were thereupon amended; and said executors and the widow, Anna M. Yon, and Benjamin T. Yon, 'the only child of the testator, were all made parties defendant, and the action was continued, as though these persons had been original parties. The executors filed to the amended complaint substantially the answer filed by the said Benjamin A. Yon. The widow, Anna A. Yon, and also the child, Benjamin T. Yon, answered the amended complaint. The latter being an infant, answered by his guardian ad litem, filing a formal infant’s answer. *429 On notice served by the attorneys representing Benjamin A. Yon, 'his testimony was taken de bene esse.

The special referee, Andrew C. Dibble, after a general statement of the case, finds the facts and reports his conclusions of law as follows:

“During the early part of i860, Benjamin A. Yon was duly appointed the guardian of the persons and estates of the plaintiffs, Minerva C. Phillips (then Minerva C. Jeff-coat), Prances A. Corbett (then Prances A. Jeffcoat), and Allen U. Jeffcoat, and also of Paul D. and Samuel B. Jeff-coat, all of whom were then minor children of Urbane E. Jeffcoat, who died about the year 1858; and upon such appointment the said Yon duly qualified as such guardian, and assumed the management of the estates of said minors.. The proceedings bearing upon the said guardianship were destroyed with the public records at the time -of the raid of Sherman’s army through this State in 1865, and it has, therefore, been necessary to resort to other methods of proof concerning the guardianship. That the appointment was in the early part of i860, is evidenced by the fact that Minerva C., who was the eldest of the children, was a •month or two over fourteen years 'old at the time, and she was' fourteen in January, i860. It would seem also that the appointment was made by the court of equity, in which at the time a suit was pending for a partition of. the lands of the said Urbane E. Jeffcoat, and in which suit was also necessarily involved a complete settlement of all the affairs of the estate of said Urbane E. Jeffcoat. This was not an unusual proceeding for that Court, which had the jurisdiction to appoint guardians for minors in oases before it; and in this particular case, Charles B. Glover, Esq., the office clerk of the commissioner in equity, mentions significantly the ‘occasion when we desired to fix the amount of the bond of the guardian of the Children of Jeffcoat.’ Besides this, the only return made by Yon, as guardian, since the war, was made to the commissioner in equity in 1866, and from *430 his own testimony it appears that his impression was that he was appointed by the Court of Equity.
“The next question to be determined is as to what assets or property, if any, came into the hands of the said guardian, as a part of the estate of his said wards, or, to push the inquiry further, was there any assests or property which he did not receive for his said wards, because of failure on his part 'to1 exercise proper diligence in their behalf. These inquiries will not at present touch upon that branch .of the case which concerns the real estate bid off by Yon at the sale of the lands of the estate of Urbane E. Jeffcoat, the father of said wards, as it is deemed .better to consider the questions made respecting the said real estate separately. It will be remembered, that at the time of his assuming the guardianship, the estate of Urbane E. Jeffcoat, the only source from which it is contended that his wards were to receive property, was in course of settlement in a case then pending in the court of equity, and that this case had not been concluded, nor had all the debts been paid, at the close of the war in 1865. The personal property of the estate in the hands of the administrator, though large arid exceeding $13,000, was insufficient to pay the debts of the deceased intestate, and this fact was 'known 'by the administrator, and was set up by him in said suit, and under these circumstances it is not probable that 'he would have paid any of the funds in his hands or delivered any of the property of the estate to the guardian, for in the suit then pending it was necessary that he should account for 'his administration, and an improper disposition of any of the assets in his hands would not have been sustained. I think, therefore, that it is clear that nothing was paid by Livingston, the administrator, to the guardian, Yon, for his wards. Nor is there-any evidence that Yon was paid any of the cash received by the commissioner on the sales made by him. of the real estate. Nor under the -circumstances should Yon be blamed or held accountable in any way for losses of assets belonging to the estate of Jeffcoat, by either the administrator or mm mis *431 sioner in equity, for the court of equity had assumed the control and settlement of the affairs pertaining to the property of the estate, and the guardian could only await the action of that tribunal, and receive what it should direct be paid to him for his wards.
“And now as to real estate bid off by Benjamin A. Yon at the sale had by the commissioner in equity, under the orders of the Court in the case above alluded to, for the partition of the real estate of Urbane E. Jeffcoat and the settlement of his estate. As to this land, it is claimed by the plaintiffs that Benjamin A. Yon purchased the property and took title therefor in his own name, and paid the purchase price by receipting to the commissioner for the same upon the distributive shares of his wards. Yon admits his purchase of the property in question, and that he received title thereto in his own name, but contends that he complied with the terms of sale by paying the cash payment from his own funds, and giving bond and mortgage to secure the credit portion, which he also afterwards paid with his own money. He is inaccurate, however, as to many of the details of the transaction. A portion of the lands was sold in April, i860, and a part in July of the same year. He says that he bought at the first sale — it is conclusively shown that it was the last, in July, when he purchased. He says the 'terms of sale were one-4ialf cash, and the balance on twelve months time, whereas, the best evidence we have as to this, is the bond of Edward Argoe, taken at the same sale, and which in connection with Argoe’s testimony in the case of Dibble, adrnr., v. Holman, admr., et al.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 618, 61 S.C. 426, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-yon-sc-1901.