Snoddy v. Burnett

21 S.E.2d 198, 201 S.C. 14
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 13, 1942
Docket15443
StatusPublished

This text of 21 S.E.2d 198 (Snoddy v. Burnett) 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
Snoddy v. Burnett, 21 S.E.2d 198, 201 S.C. 14 (S.C. 1942).

Opinions

The opinion filed by

Circuit Judge G. B. Greene,

Acting Associate Justice, is herebelow first reported. The other members of the Court concurred'in part with Judge Greene, and three members concurred in the concurring and dissenting opinion of Mr. Associate Justice Stukes, last below reported.

The opinion of Judge Greene follows:

J. R. Snoddy, a farmer of Spartanburg County, South Carolina, died July 5, 1935, leaving by will all of his estate, real and personal, to his three sons, S. M. Snoddy, Harry Snoddy and J. R. Snoddy, Jr. All three sons were appointed executors of said will and all duly qualified as such. On August 26, 1937, the executors filed a return in the Probate Court showing receipts of $2,653.20, and disbursements of $1,875.18. On August 6, 1938, Nannie M. Burnett, appellant herein, recovered judgment against the executors in the sum of $2,216.75, in an action for services rendered testator from July 1, 1929, to July 1, 1935.

[16]*16On August 8, 1938, the executors filed their petition in the Probate Court alleging that testator’s personal estate was not sufficient to pay his debts and asking that his real estate, consisting of a tract of land containing 135 acres, situated in Spartanburg County, be sold in aid of assets to pay debts. Nannie M. Burnett was made a party defendant in said petition and answered same alleging that the executors had misappropriated a large part of the estate and demanding an accounting therefor. The Probate Court ordered the sale of said real estate and sold the same on salesday in September, 1939, for $2,000.00.

After a full hearing on the accounting phase of the pro-, ceeding, the Probate Court made another order, dated February 2, 1939, requiring the executors to account as to a number of items in dispute and refusing to require them to account as to some others. From this order Nannie M. Burnett appealed to the Court of Common Pleas and her appeal was heard by Pión. G. Duncan Bellinger, presiding Judge, who, by a formal order dated May 9, 1940, overruled all exceptions and affirmed the order of the Probate Court. Notice of appeal from Judge Bellinger’s order was duly served, but by agreement of all parties the settlement of the case for appeal was postponed pending litigation in respect to homestead exemptions in both the personal and real property of testator as claimed by his sons.

During the pendency of the accounting proceeding, Harry Snoddy died intestate and S. M. Snoddy was appointed administrator of his estate, and as such substituted for him in said proceeding. Thereafter, S. M. Snoddy and J. R. Snoddy, Jr., the only heirs-at-law of Harry Snoddy, deceased, and the only surviving children of testator, filed their petition in the Probate Court asking that there be set off to them a homestead exemption of $500.00 in testator’s personal estate, and $1,000.00 in the proceeds of the sale of the 135-acre tract of land, as against testator’s debts. Nannie M. Burnett was made a party defendant in that proceeding [17]*17and answered denying the right of petitioners to the homestead exemption claimed by them. After a full hearing was had the Probate Court, on March 20, 1941, passed an order setting aside to petitioners the homestead exemption asked for in their petition. From that order Nannie M. Burnett appealed to the Court of Common Pleas and her appeal was heard by Hon. Thos. S. Sease, presiding Judge, who, on July 29, 1941, signed an order dismissing the appeal and affirming the order of the Probate Court. Nannie M. Burnett then gave due notice of appeal to this Court from Judge Sease’s order.

The case is now before us on appeal from both the order of Judge Bellinger and the order of Judge Sease hereinabove referred to. There are ten exceptions in all. The first six exceptions charge error to Judge Bellinger in approving and affirming the order of the Probate Court which refused to require respondents to account in a number of particulars. We deem it unnecessary to consider these exceptions separately. Whether respondents should have been required to account as to the several items in dispute depended upon the evidence adduced at the hearing. The order of the Probate Court was well prepared and stated fully and clearly the reasons upon which that Court based its findings and conclusions as to every item in dispute. The Circuit Court approved those findings and conclusions and after a careful study of the entire record we find that we would not be justified under the law and the evidence in reversing or modifying the order appealed from. All exceptions to the order of Judge Bellinger are overruled.

The last four exceptions imputed error to Judge Sease in allowing respondents a homestead exemption in both the personal and the real property of testator. These exceptions, according to appellant’s brief, raise but two questions: 1. Was testator entitled to a homestead exemption at the time of his death? 2. If so, did that right terminate with his death [18]*18or was it transferred by operation of law to his children, the respondents herein?

It is not disputed that at -the time of his death testator was a resident of this State, that he owed considerable debts, and that he owned property from which a homestead could be claimed. Testator then would have had the right to claim a homestead exemption provided that he was at the time of his death “the head of a family” within the meaning of that provision in the Constitution and homestead laws of this State. ITe died in 1935 at his home in Spartanburg County where he had resided since 1876 and where he had reared his three sons, the youngest of whom is more than thirty years of age. Testator’s wife died in 1904, and he continued to reside in this same home with a housekeeper, and one of his sons, Harry Snoddy, who was a bachelor and who had lived with his father all his life. The other two children, S. M. Snoddy and. J. R. Snoddy, Jr., were married and had homes of their own.

In Myers v. Ham, 20 S. C., 522, it was held that the father who has a child living with him is the head of a family, and in Rollings v. Bvins, 23 S. C., 316, the Court held that this was so even though the .child was an adult married son living in his father’s home and separated from his wife. The Court defined family in that case in its ordinary sense, which includes persons living in one house and under one head or manager. In Wagener v. Parrott, 51 S. C., 489, 29 S. E., 240, 242, 64 Am. St. Rep., 695, it was held that where a widower and his adopted daughter and husband lived together in one household, of which he was the recognized head, he was entitled to homestead ekemption. In that case the Court negatives the idea that there must be some dependency, and said: “His Honor, the Circuit Judge, seemed to be inclined, judging from the language employed by him in his charge to the jury, to require that there must be some dependence of the adopted child for its support and maintenance on the adopting parent in order for such [19]*19adopted child to be regarded as a member of a family when a homestead was to be allowed the head of such family. But such view is not sound. In order to maintain it, it would be necessary that there should be recognized a difference, in the eye of the law, between a child born to one and a child adopted by one.”

Judge Sease in passing upon the question now under consideration said: “Aside from this theory of the homestead laws as applied by many Courts, it is the opinion of this Court that from the facts disclosed by the record on appeal J. R.

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Related

Burnett v. Snoddy
19 S.E.2d 904 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1942)
Dorn v. Stidham
137 S.E. 331 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
Broughton v. Broughton
75 S.E. 1027 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1912)
Ex parte Worley
26 S.E. 949 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1897)
Wagener & Co. v. Parrott
29 S.E. 240 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1898)
Ex parte Worley
32 S.E. 307 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1899)
Geiger v. Geiger
35 S.E. 1031 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E.2d 198, 201 S.C. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snoddy-v-burnett-sc-1942.