State Ex Rel. Worthy v. Brower

93 N.C. 344
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 N.C. 344 (State Ex Rel. Worthy v. Brower) 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. Worthy v. Brower, 93 N.C. 344 (N.C. 1885).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

Robert W. Goldston died intestate early in October, 1861, and letters of administration on his estate issued to George W. Goldston, who entered into a bond in the penal sum of thirty thousand dollars, with the defendant and one Crab-tree Siler, sureties, with the conditions prescribed by law, for the faithful execution of the trust assumed. Without completing administration, George W. Goldston died in July, 1863, and letters de bonis non on the intestate’s estate issued to Noah Richardson. The latter also died in May, 1867, and letters de bonis non were then granted to one Alexander Holley, then public administrator, and he having resigned his public office, the relator became administrator de bonis non of the original intestate. The present action is on the administration bond of the first administrator, George W., against the surety, in which maladministration, waste and negligence are charged, to recover the assets which are, or ought to be, in the hands of the said George W., as principal obligor therein, aud was begun by the issue of a summons on the 30th day of August, 1S76.

*346 To the complaint filed, a demurrer was interposed by the defendant, which was overruled, and the defendant then answered, admitting some of the plaintiff’s allegations, and controverting others for want of personal knowledge, or “information thereof sufficient to form a belief.” At Fall Term, 1877, the clerk of the Superior Court of Moore, being a creditor of the estate, and interested in the result, an order was entered, of reference to C. C. Wade, clerk of the Superior Court of Montgomery, to take and state the administration account of the said George W. Under a ruling of the Court, the relator was required to furnish, and did submit, a statement of the trust funds that had come into his hands, a detailed list of which, verified by his oath, is contained in the record. The commissioner proceeded under the-reference, and with accompanying evidence, made report to a succeeding term. To the report many exceptions were taken by each party, and the finding of the referee being deemed insufficient, with consent, it was recommitted to him with directions to-ascertain from the evidence already taken, and report the facts responsive to a series of inquiries which are set out in the order. The referee accordingly made a second, or, as it is called, a supplemental report at Fall Term, 1883, to which further and additional exceptions were also taken by each party. In accordance with the rulings of the Court, the .report was again referred to R. P. Buxton for correction and reformation, and he reported an account showing an excess of disbursements made by the intestate’s first administrator, the said George W., above the value of the assets with which he is charged, of three thousand and ninety-six dollars and forty-four cents ($3,096.44), estimated with interest to February 6th, 1882, and reducing the excess as reported by the first referee by the sum of three hundred and ninety-seven dollars ($397).

This preliminary statement of the action of the Court, is sufficient to enable us to enter upon an examination of the numerous exceptions contained in a record of nearly four hundred pages in manuscript, brought up by the relator’s appeal.

Plaintiff’s exceptions:

*347 1.The referee lias not charged the administrator with all’the claims, which, uncollected, passed into the hands of Noah Richardson, his successor. We concur with the Court in overruling the exception for the reasons given :

1. That many of them were then solvent and could have been collected.

2. The plaintiff does not specify which of them ought to be charged, and we may add,

3. Because a single objection to a series, valid as to a part only, is not allowable.

The correctness of the ruling is sustained by the following adjudications : Brumble v. Brown, 71 N. C., 513 ; Whitford v. Foy, Ibid., 527; Meekins v. Tatem, 79 N. C., 546; Suit v. Suit, 78 N. C., 272; Barnhardt v. Smith, 86 N. C., 473; Bost v. Bost, 87 N. C., 477.

2. The relator’s second exception is to the omission to charge the administrator with one of the claims in a list found in a book wherein the administration account is kept, marked in pencil as paid. The entry bears date June 14, 1861, four months before the death of the intestate. Many others are also marked paid with .which he has charged himself. It does not appear whether this debt was paid during the intestate’s lifetime or since, nor is there any other evidence that payment was made to the administrator, or that the entry was intended for any purpose except, to designate it as a paid debt, no longer due, and relieve the debtor from a further demand. The Court upon these facts refused to sustain the charge, inasmuch as the administrator has charged himself with all others so marked, and his death deprives the defendant of all means of explanation. We are not disposed to disturb this ruling of the Court.

3. The third exception is to the referee’s refusal to charge the administrator with certain bonds, notes, and a judgment received and inventoried by the administrator, and specifically mentioned in the exception.

*348 Of these, three of inconsiderable amount are withdrawn by the relator — the exception sustained as to the notes of Wilson and Phillips, whose aggregate principal is $36j^3g-, and overruled as to the two bonds of Davis and the bonds of Short and Stutts, whose united principal is $204t6t8q-. This ruling rests upon these findings of facts:

The notes of Wilson and Phillips are returned in the inventory of the intestate’s estate to April Term, 1862, of Moore County Court, and no mention is made of them thereafter.

The four bonds, the exception in reference to which is overruled, were returned in a receipt of one J. D. Curry, a deputy of the sheriff, entered in the'inventory, and this receipt, was among the papers belonging to the estate, at the death of the administrator in November, 1863. There is no error in this.

4. The relator excepts to the omission of the referee to charge the administrator with a debt of $349, due from G. W. I. Goldst.on to the intestate.

This exception is overruled upon the ground of the absence of any evidence'of the solvency of the debtor. The Court says if the debt was good, the collection of it was so obstructed by State legislation in the enactment of a stay law, and by the general disturbed condition of the country, as to excuse the administrator for'his delaying an effort to enforce payment, and if the debt could not have been collected by reason of the debtor’s insolvency j he is not, of course, responsible. The reasons assigned for not sustaining the exception seem sufficient.

5. The 5th exception is abandoned.

6.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.C. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-worthy-v-brower-nc-1885.