Tolbert v. Roark

119 S.E. 571, 126 S.C. 207, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 24, 1923
Docket11309
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 119 S.E. 571 (Tolbert v. Roark) 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
Tolbert v. Roark, 119 S.E. 571, 126 S.C. 207, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 166 (S.C. 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

Mrs. Lena .Cox recovered, October 3, 1922, in the Court of Common Pleas for Pickens County, a judgment by default *210 against E. E. Looper, as executor of the will of Mrs. Lizzie C. Looper. Execution thereon was issued, and certain land, of which testatrix died seized, was levied upon and advertised for sale by the, Sheriff of Pickens County on salesday, December 4, 1922. On November 29, 1922, this action was brought by. certain of the • remaindermen under the will of Lizzie C. Looper against R. R. Roark, as Sheriff, E. E. Looper, Mrs. Lena Cox> and others, seeking to enjoin the sale of the, land under the execution in the hands of the Sheriff and to open the judgment in the case of Cox v. Looper to the end that the plaintiffs be given opportunity to protect their interests in that cause.

The complaint alleges, in substance: (1) That E. E. Looper is the executor of the will of Mrs. Lizzie Looper; (2) that by the terms of Mrs. Looper’s will the land about to be sold was devised to her husband, the said E. F. Looper, for his life or widowhood, and at his death or remarriage to her children, etc., among whom are these plaintiffs; (3) that the judgment obtained by Mrs. Cox was upon notes originally given by Mrs. Looper and secured by a mortgage of the land devised as aforesaid; (4) that in August, 1922, E. E. Looper had brought action against these plaintiffs (presumably as the owner and holder in his individual right) to foreclose the mortgage securing the notes in question; (5) that Mrs. Cox claims to have purchased the said notes from E. E. Looper and knew or should have known of the pendency of the action by Looper against these plaintiffs and others, in which the validity of the “said paper” was being contested; (6) that the Cox judgment was hurriedly taken without the plaintiff’s knowledge, during the pendency of Looper’s action against them, and that the executor joined with and assisted Mrs. Cox in securing the judgment; (7) that the plaintiffs have a good defense (not set out) against the cause of action on the notes; (8) and that E. E. Looper is about to marry again and is endeavoring to convert the *211 land involved to his own use without a proper accounting and without regard to the rights of the remaindermen.

Pursuant to four days’ notice to show cause, directed to the defendants, Roark, Sheriff, E. F. Looper, and Mrs. Lena Cox, who are the appellants here, Judge Sease, at Spartanburg, outside the Circuit in.which the action was brought, granted the order appealed from: (1) Enjoining the sale of the land; (2) opening and setting aside the judgment in Cox v. Looper; and (3) authorizing the parties at interest to file answers in the said cause of Cox v. Looper.

The first question raised by the appeal is thus stated by' appellants’ counsel:

“Is the judgment in the case of Mrs. Lena Cox v. B. B. Looper, Bxecutor, valid against the estate of Mrs. Lizzie Looper? If so, were her heirs, the remaindermen under her will, necessary or proper parties to that action?”

There can be no doubt that in so far as is disclosed by the appeal record the default judgment rendered in the case of Mrs. Lena Cox v. B. B. Looper, as executor of the last will and testament of Mrs. Lizzie C. Looper was on its face a valid judgment de bonis testdtoris. As such it was conclusive as to and binding upon the parties and their privies. 24 C. J., 893, § 2225. Since the legal title to a decedent’s personalty, which is primarily liable for the payment of decedent’s debts, passes to his personal representative, a judgment against an executor is conclusive as to and binding upon the legatees as privies of the executor. Braser v. Charleston, 19 S. C., 384, 401. And see McNair v. Howle, 123 S. C., 252; 116 S. E., 279.

While the legal title to a decedent’s real estate does not pass to the personal representative, but vests in the heirs at law or devisees, nevertheless under the settled law of this jurisdiction (DeUrphey v. Nelson, 1 Brev., 289. Huggins v. Oliver, 21 S. C., 147. Brock v. Kirkpatrick, 60 S. C., 322; 38 S. E., 779; 85 Am. St. Rep., 847. McNair v. Howle, supra) lands of a decedent which *212 are not in the actual and exclusive possession of the heirs or devisees at the time of the recovery, on account of a debt of the decedent, of a judgment against the personal representative alone, are impressed with the lien of such judgment and may be lawfully sold thereunder. It follows that such a judgment, in so far as real estate of the testator which had not passed into the áctual and exclusive possession of the devisee is concerned, would be prima facie binding and conclusive upon a devisee as well as upon a legatee.

In such case, where the lands of the testator at the time of recovery of judgment against the executor have not passed into the actual and exclusive possession of the devisee and hence, in contemplation of law, are in the possession of the executor as assets for the payment of the testator’s debts, as was said in McNair v. Howle, supra, “the personal representative of the deceased debtor ‘is the only necessary or even proper party.’ ”

And even if at the time of the recovery of the judgment against the executor the lands of the testator have passed into the actual and exclusive possession of the devisee, still the devisee would not be a necessary party to the creditor’s action against the executor for the reason that as á devisee in actual and exclusive possession of the land he. would not be bound or concluded by such judgment In that situation, in the language of Chancellor Dunkin in Bird v. Howze, Speers, Eq., 250:

“The cause of action must be established against the heir [or devisee], and he is not bound by a judgment' against the executor or administrator.” Gilliland v. Caldwell, 1 S. C., 194. McNair v. Howle, supra.

If, therefore, having recovered judgment against the executor, the creditor then seeks to subject lands of the testator, in the actual and exclusive possession of the devisee at the time of the recovery of the judgment, to the payment thereof, the devisee, not being bound by the judgment against the executor, is entitled to his day in Court and is a neces *213 sary party to any action or proceeding to subject such lands to the payment of the judgment. McNair v. Howle, supra; Wilson v. Kelly, 19 S. C., 160.

But because the devisee or heir in actual and exclusive possession of the deceased debtor’s lands is not a necessary party to an action by the creditor against the personal representative, since a judgment in such action would not be binding upon him, still it does not follow that the heir or devisee in possession may not be a proper party to the action by the creditor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.E. 571, 126 S.C. 207, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolbert-v-roark-sc-1923.