Roberts v. Johns

24 S.C. 580, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 22, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 S.C. 580 (Roberts v. Johns) 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
Roberts v. Johns, 24 S.C. 580, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 81 (S.C. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by ■

Mr. Justice Eraser.

A full statement of the facts will be found [583]*583in the “Brief” in this case. So much of the facts as will be necessary to explain the ruling of this court will be stated in connection with the consideration of the several questions raised by this appeal. Plaintiffs and defendant have excepted to the decree of the Circuit Judge, and the various questions raised cannot well-be considered in the order in which they are presented in the exceptions. They will be taken up in what seems to be a more convenient, if not more logical, order.

I. The first exception is on behalf of the defendant, and is to the order of reference to a special referee, and not to the master-for Oconee County. This action was commenced September 27, 1875. A demurrer to the complaint was overruled, with leave to answer; on appeal, the judgment of the Circuit Court was affirmed and the case remanded to the Circuit Court. By an order of the Circuit Court, all the issues of law and fact were referred to S. P. Dendy, as special referee, who made his report, March 11,1879. This report was overruled by the Circuit Judge and the complaint dismissed. On appeal to the Supreme Court,this judgment of the Circuit Court was reversed, and the case was “remanded to that court for such orders and proceedings as may be necessary to carry into effect” the judgment of the-Supreme Court. This judgment of the Supreme Court was filed November 11, 1881.

On June 27, 1882, the Circuit Judge made an order by which it was referred to S. P. Dendy, “as special referee, to state the accounts of the defendant, James A. Johns, as administrator of the estate of James Johns, deceased, in accordance with the principles enunciated in the decree of the Supreme Court in the above.stated action.” To this order of reference counsel for the defendant excepted. If this exception was in writing, it does not appear in the “Brief.” It is stated in the argument of defendant’s counsel in the following language: “Because the reference therein ordered is to S. P. Dendy, as special referee, instead of Richard Lewis, Esq., master for said county.” This exception was renewed on the first reference held by S. P. Dendy as special referee; it was taken before the Circuit Court on the hearing of the exceptions to the report of S. P. Dendy as special referee; and is again presented to this court, and with much earnestness. ■

[584]*584■ The exception raises two questions, one of substance and one of mere form. First as to substance. By section 781, General Statutes, which became law May 1, 1882, and before the date of 'this order of reference, it is enacted that “the office of referee and the practice of referring cases to referees as provided in the code of procedure shall not exist- or be used in the counties of * * * Oconee * * Section 782 provides for the appointment of a master for. Oconee and the other counties named in section 781. Section 789 provides for the appointment of a special master in certain cases, in these words: “In case of a vacancy in the office of master during a term of the court, or in case of the disability of the master from interest or a.ny other reason, the presiding judge may appoint a special master in any cause, who shall, as to .such cause, be clothed with all the powers of master. The amendment by the act of February 19, 1880, by which cases under reference at that date were excepted from-the operation of the master’s act then in force, was not reenacted in the general statutes, May 1, 1882.

■ The authority of S. P. Dendy as special referee, under the first order, ceased when his report was filed, March 11,1879, and the-special exception of cases under reference no longer existed when the general statutes became of force. The order of reference here called in question must, therefore, be valid under section 789, or then it was made without authority of law. By section 789 it is provided that in case of disability of the master “from" interest or any other reason, the presiding judge may .appoint a special master,” who shall be “clothed with all the powers of the master.” The words “any other reason” were intended to give, to the presiding judge large discretionary power, not, however,to be exercised capriciously, as to what reason is sufficient to disqualify a master from acting in any given Cause.

It appears from the brief in this case, that Richard Lewis, the master for Oconee County, was at onetime judge of probate, and that an order of final discharge granted by him as judge of probate to the defendant in this case, as administrator of this estate, - is one of the material matters sought to be investigated in these, proceedings, and the validity of which is the very foundation of his defence. It was, therefore, due, not only to the plaintiffs, but. [585]*585to the master himself, that it should be referred to some one else besides himself to state these accounts. It was, therefore, proper that the presiding judge should have made this reference to some one other than Richard Lewis, master for Oconee County. There is nothing in the conduct of S. P. Dendy, the special referee, in the hearing of the case, in his report on the matters referred, or in any other way, outside of statements of counsel, which shows that he is in any way an improper person to hear the case under an order of reference. So much for the substantive features of this order of reference to S. P. Dendy, and in which, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, it is fair to assume it was presented to the mind of the Circuit Judge by whom it was made.

The other objection is one óf mere form. It is contended, if we apprehend correctly the position taken in arguments, that a reference may be made to a “special master,” and not to a “special referee.” An examination of the code will show that this officer is called “referee,” and that the term “special referee” is nowhere used. If all orders in which the exact name by which this appointee of the court is called in the act is not used are void, then all orders of reference to “special referees,” even before the passage of the master’s act, were without authority of law. Yet our own reports will show that there have been a large number of such orders of reference, and that none of them have-been, for this reason, called in question. It is true that “the. office of referee, as prescribed in the code,” has been abolished and the office of master substituted in its place, but an examination of the code and of the master’s act will show that there is a substantial difference between the “office of master” and the “office of referee,” and not a mere change in the name.

In the Fifty-four First Mortgage Bond Case (15 S. C., 304) and Ex Parte Brown (Ibid., 518), it is held that an order that-“the president and directors of the Greenville and Columbia Railroad Company” should continue in the possession and management of the property of the company, and which conferred such' powers and imposed such duties as are usually conferred on receivers, created the said president and directors receivers, although they were not so called and named in the order. In [586]*586Ex Parte Brown, the court says: “Every essential feature of a receivership was created by the order of July 2, 1872, and the office ought to have been so called.” It would, on the same principle, be proper to hold that an order of reference would be good if made to a person by name, without styling him either master or referee.

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Related

Anderson v. Bowers
170 F.2d 676 (Fourth Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.C. 580, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-johns-sc-1886.