State Ex Rel. Roper v. Burton

12 S.E. 334, 107 N.C. 526
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 12 S.E. 334 (State Ex Rel. Roper v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Roper v. Burton, 12 S.E. 334, 107 N.C. 526 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

Davis, J.

after stating the facts: The principal question involved in the controversy before us is, Was Jones W. Burton, administrator d. b. n. of Charles Roper, and the sureties on.his administration bond, liable to the plaintiffs by reason of the failure or neglect of the said administrator d. b. n. to collect or account for the proceeds of the sales of the slaves made by Chalmers L. Glenn under the decree of the Court of Equity of Rockingham County made at the Fall Term, 1859, of said Court? And this will depend upon the further *537 question, Was Chalmers L. Glenn (and the sureties on his administration bond) liable, as administrator, for the proceeds of the sales of said slaves ?

It is insisted by the plaintiffs that the slaves were sold by Chalmers L. Glenn, as adminstrator of Charles Roper, deceased, for settlement and distribution, and not for a “division” of the slaves among the next of kin, and that the referee erred in his ninth finding of fact, as set out in the second exception. If there was any competent evidence to support the finding of fact, it is too well settled to need citation of authority that the finding of the fact by the referee, approved and affirmed by the Judge below, is conclusive, and cannot be reviewed by this Court. Was there any evidence to support the finding, and to show that Chal-mers L. Glenn, not as administrator acting in the due course of the administration of the assets of the estate, but as corn; missioner, appointed by and acting under the decree of Court as such, to make the sales of the slaves for partition among the next of kin under the direction of the Court?

The learned counsel who so ably argued the cause in behalf of the plaintiffs says:

Before partition could be asked for and made, the slaves must have passed from the possession and control of the administrator Glenn into the possession of the next of kin, as tenants in common and not as distributees. The assent of the administrator must be given to pass the property to the next of kin, and must appear by some visible sign or act. Here the next of kin were scattered, and even unknown, and all who were known evidently regarded the slaves as in the possession and control of the administrator as' such. There was no purpose to change such possession except by sale, the proceeds of sale to be and remain in the hands of the administrator as such, under the security of his bond for the safe custody of the money. Glenn took notes for the purchase-money of the slaves in his own name as *538 adminstrator, collected tlie money in part, and loaned some of it in his own name as administrator of Charles Roper. After the death of Glenn, the administrator d. b. n., Jones W. Burton, received the notes and bonds as a part of the estate of the intestate Roper, so considered and treated them, and returned them as such, and brought suits and took judgments on said notes and bonds as administrator of Roper, and collected some portions of it as the estate of his intestate.”

It abundantly appears from the evidence that the slaves were not needed in the administration of the estate to make assets to pay debts, and it appears from the record that, at the November Term, 1857, of the County Court of Rocking-ham, the widow of Charles Roper being entitled to one-half of the slaves, commissioners theretofore appointed for that purpose allotted to the widow certain slaves (naming them), and certain other slaves (naming them) “ to the legatees.” And it further appears from the record that, for the years 1858 and 1859, the slaves allotted to the legatees were hired out by “ C. L. Glenn, administrator for the legatees of Charles Roper.”

It further appears that the next of kin were scattered in different States, and their names and residences could not all be ascertained, and certain of them, acting under the advice of learned and eminent counsel, filed a bill in equity ■ for a sale of the slaves. Judge Dillard says in his evidence, “ the negroes having been divided,” a bill in equity was filed in the name of William M. Roper and others (next of kin of Charles Roper), “ for the sale of the negroes which had been set apart to the next of kin,” etc.

The record shows that the application for the sale was not made by the administrator “ for the purposes of paying debts, or distribution, or both,” under chapter 46, section 17 of the Revised Code, but by some of the next of kin of Charles Roper, for partition, as allowed in chapter 82, section 18 *539 of the Revised Code, who alleged that, besides the plaintiffs named in the bill, Charles Roper, deceased, had two brothers and four sisters, who left the State of Virginia, “their former place of residence,” twenty years or more since, and had not been heard from, either by the petitioners or by the said administrator, after “ diligent inquiry,” and are presumed to be dead; they further say that “slaves are now selling for a fair price, and in view of the possibility of other next of kin of Charles Roper being discovered thereafter, they are advised, and the administrator, C. L. Glenn, concurs, that it would behest to sell the said slaves and distribute the proceeds, together with all the other personal estate, to them as such next of kin, under proper provisions for the benefit of others, should they be. discovered,” etc.

The administrator answered, and after admitting facts stated in the petition and asking the Court “ to see that he is amply protected before it shall decree” that the complainants are entitled to the whole of the estate, upon the presumption that others of the next of kin are dead,” he says that he concurs in the opinion “that it will be best to to sell the slaves,” etc.

There was a decree for sale, and a sale in pursuance thereto, as set out in the ninth finding. After the allotment and assignment of one-half of the slaves to the widow and the other half “to the legatees” by an order of the Court, 'it appears from the evidence that C. L. Glenn hired them out “ for the legatees.”

It will be observed that the slaves were not sold upon the application of the administrator, as provided in chapter 46, section ] 7 of the Revised Code. He had administered the estate of the intestate, had paid its debts, and was ready to turn the slaves over to the persons entitled to them, and did deliver one-half of them to the widow, and held the other half and hired them out “for the legatees,” or distributees, until, upon their application, they were sold by him under a *540 decree'of the Court of Equity, and the record shows that he made the sale “for the legatees,” acting under the authority of the Court, and there was ample evidence to ’support the finding of fact, and as' was held in the case of Fanshaw v. Fanshaw,

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E. 334, 107 N.C. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-roper-v-burton-nc-1890.