Swinton v. Egleston

24 S.C. Eq. 201
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 24 S.C. Eq. 201 (Swinton v. Egleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swinton v. Egleston, 24 S.C. Eq. 201 (S.C. Ct. App. 1851).

Opinion

Wardlaw, Ch.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Hannah Swinton, the testatrix, died in 1843. Her will, dated February 27, 1832, contains the following clauses : “ I give and bequeath twelve shares of the dividends of my five per cent, stock, of the State of South Carolina, unto my executors, in trust always nevertheless, that they shall pay over the interest on said stock to my slave named Minda, for and during the time of her natural life, quarterly, as they shall receive the same in equal shares; and at the death of my said slave Minda, the said five per cent, stock and dividends of the said State, shall go to the Sabbath School of the Circular Church, No. one; and I charge my executors to fulfil the foregoing bequest in favor of the said Sabbath School, and if it should not be incorporated, then, I do hereby make them trustees, if necessary, for that purpose ; and if the said Sabbath School should not exist at the time when the said legacy shall accrue, then, the said stock and dividends shall go to the Circular Church in Charleston, forever.” “ I desire that all the property, not specified in this my will, whatsoever, howsoever, and wheresoever it may be found, which I now hold, or hereafter I may hold, shall go to assist in educating the children of my deceased brother, James Swinton, until the youngest is twenty years old, then I desire that it shall go to 'my infant nephew, Hugh Ralph Swinton, to him and his heirs forever ; but in the case,” &c. The context, by the minute specification of her estate, and the careful mention of all persons, whom she supposed to have any claim upon her bounty, manifests the purpose of testatrix to dispose of her whole estate, and •not, as to any part of it, to die intestate.

[203]*203It is clear, too, from the will, that the plaintiff is a favorite legatee, for, in addition to several immediate bequests, he takes in remainder, in several instances, property given to others for life. There is, in the will, no other disposition of the residue, except that contained in the clause above recited.

The plaintiff states in his bill, that he is the youngest child of James Swinton, and is over the age when the residue was appointed to vest in him ; and he claims, that the legacy in trust for the slave Minda, is null and void by the 4th section of the Act of 1841 (11' Stat. 154,) and falls into the residue, to which he is entitled. The sum in controversy is small, consisting of the dividends of $1200, in the 5 per cents, of State stock, for the life-time of Minda, from the death of the testatrix, or the attainment of twenty years by the plaintiff, whichever was the posterior event.

The plaintiff in his bill made no parties defendants except the executors, and they, in their answer, operating to this extent as a demurrer, objected, that all the parties in interest were not parties to the suit. At February Term, 1850, Chancellor Dargan made the following order: “ On hearing the bill and answer in this cause, it is ordered, that the complainant have leave to amend his bill, by adding new parties thereto, as follows, to wit: the corporation of the Circular Church, the next of kin of the testatrix, Hannah Swinton, and Sabbath School No. 1, of the Circular Church, if the same should be incorporated, and if not incorporated, the said Sabbath School shall be represented by the parties defendants before the Court, as the trustees of the School, “being declared such by the will, in the event that the said school shall not be incorporated.” The plaintiff finding it inconvenient to comply with this order, as the next of kin were numerous and widely dispersed, brought the matter before Chancellor Dunkin, at June term, 1850, and moved to rescind so much of the former order as required the next of kin of testatrix to be made parties : and this motion was refused by the Chancellor.

The appeal is from this order and this refusal, on the ground, that the next of kin of testatrix are not necessary parties in this [204]*204suit The Chancellor on circuit at the last term, pursued the course required by principle and comity, in dismissing- a motion ,to modify the order of his predecessor, where no change of circumstances demanded a change of discretion. The motion was in the nature of an appeal, from one to another, of co-ordinate authority. But in this Court, we may deal with the whole matter, according to the doctrines and practice of equity. The general rule, as to parties in equity, is, that all persons having an interest in the object of the suit, ought to be made parties. The reasons of the rule are, that the Court may completely determine the rights of all persons interested, — that future litigation may be prevented, — and that the orders of the Court may be safely executed by those upon whom they operate. Departures from the general rule are sometimes allowed by the discretion of the Court. As in a suit which affects the personal estate, the legatees may not be necessary parties, although having interest in the object of suit, inasmuch as they are represented in the person of the executor, or administrator, and their rights thus sufficiently protected. So, where the next of kin are proper parties, it is not indispensable that all of them should be expressly brought in, for if one or more of them be named as parties, all may attend the accounting before the master, and be heard by counsel in the Court. (Calvert, 11, 20, 51; Sp. Eq. 430.)

Whether, in this case, the next of kin of testatrix have an interest in the object of the suit, depends upon the subordinate questions, whether the plaintiff is constituted, by the terms of the will, general legatee of the residue ; and whether the legacy in trust for a slave falls into the residue.

That a gift of the residue may have a limited operation, is unquestionable, where the words of the will and the manifest intention of the testator require such construction. Even general words sufficiently broad to cover the whole, may be confined in their operation by connection with other parts of the will. In Attorney General vs. Johnstone, (Amb. 577,) Lord Camden held that, where testator had expressed doubt if there would be any residue, and then mentioned it as a small remainder of about £100, [205]*205the gift of the residue did not include lapsed legacies amounting to £20,000. So, in Daveis vs. Dewes, (3 P. Wms., 40,) testator gave Cheevely House to his wife for life, declaring that he would dispose of the goods and furniture, in Cheevely House, after his wife’s death, by a codicil to his will; and then bequeathed to his wife the residue of his personal estate, whatsoever, not before disposed of, or reserved to be disposed of by his codicil; and afterwards made two codicils without disposing of his said goods and furniture : Lord King held, that the testator had not given to his wife all the property which he had not disposed of by his will, or which he might not dispose of by his codicil, but expressly excepted, out of the residuary bequest, the property reserved to be disposed of by his codicil; that the goods and furniture, so expressly excepted and reserved, did not pass to the wife. In commenting upon these two cases, in Bland vs. Lamb, (2 Jac. & W. 405,) Lord Eldon speaks of them as deciding, that the words employed described only the actual surplus of what the testators had at the dates of their wills, and, while admitting that such construction may be adopted, where the intention is clear, discredits some of the opinions expressed in these cases. In our own case of Peay & Picket vs. Barber, (1 Hill Ch.

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24 S.C. Eq. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swinton-v-egleston-scctapp-1851.