Topping v. . Windley

5 S.E. 14, 99 N.C. 4
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 5 S.E. 14 (Topping v. . Windley) 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
Topping v. . Windley, 5 S.E. 14, 99 N.C. 4 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

The complaint alleges that the defendant, G. L. Windley, was, on 1 May, 1874, clerk of the Superior Court and judge of probate for the county of Beaufort, and that as such he executed and delivered to the State of North Carolina his official bond and renewal bond, to which the other defendants are sureties; that on 1 May, 1874, the defendant, Windley, acting in his official character, appointed one Ira H. Topping as guardian of the relator, who was then a minor, aged about eleven years, and issued letters of guardianship, general in their character and extending to the property as well as to the person of the relator; that said Windley, at the time of issuing the said letters of guardianship, failed and neglected to require of said guardian a good and sufficient bond, but accepted one wholly insufficient and insolvent, with only one surety and not justified; that only one renewal bond was given by the guardian, and that in 1879, which was then and still is insolvent, and that the guardian failed to file any account of his guardianship, and died in March, 1883, totally insolvent; that the guardian entered upon his duties at once upon his appointment, received and took into his possession the estate of the relator, receiving the rents of lands and the proceeds of lands sold by him as guardian under judicial proceedings *Page 35 and failed to account to the relator therefor, or to pay over the same or any part thereof, and asks judgment, etc.

The answer admits that Windley was clerk, and as such gave (6) the usual bonds, and that the defendants were his sureties.

It is denied that Windley appointed I. H. Topping guardian to the relator, or that he ever acted as such.

The defendants ask that they be furnished with the particulars of the property of the relator alleged to have been received by the said Ira H. Topping, and further say that the action did not accrue within six years, etc., and is barred by statute.

The plaintiff filed a statement specifying the sums demanded.

At February Term, 1886, the issue raised, "Was Ira Topping appointed guardian of the relator, T. J. Topping, then an infant, by Geo. L. Windley, clerk of the Superior Court of said county?" was tried before his Honor, Judge Gudger, by an inspection of the records, and upon said inspection it was adjudged that Windley was clerk of said court on 1 May, 1874, and acting as such on that day appointed the said Ira H. Topping guardian of the relator.

To this judgment the defendants excepted.

It was then referred to Goethe Wilkens, clerk of the court, to state and report an account showing:

"1st. Whether said Windley, as clerk aforesaid, took from said Ira, in his appointment as guardian as aforesaid, any and what bond, and if any, whether it was good and sufficient when taken.

"2d. What property . . . was or might and ought to have been received by said guardian, what was expended for or paid over to said ward, and what balance, if any, is owing to said ward?

"3. What damage, if any, the relator has sustained by reason of the insufficiency of the said guardian bond.

"4. Also showing in what proportions and for what sums, if any, the sureties to the several bonds of Windley, as clerk as aforesaid, are liable among themselves, and which of said sureties are now (7) solvent."

No exception was taken to the order of reference, and the referee reports in substance: That Windley, as clerk, etc., upon the appointment and qualification of Ira H. Topping as guardian of the relator, accepted a guardian bond which was insufficient, having but one surety, and said surety totally insolvent; that the said guardian at various times received money belonging to his ward, and expended money for him, an itemized account of which was reported, in which the guardian was charged with 8 per cent interest upon his receipts, and a like rate of interest was allowed upon his disbursements, and in which no commissions were allowed, "as said guardian has at no one time since his appointment *Page 36 filed or rendered an inventory or annual account of his ward's estate"; that there was a balance of $290.18 due the relator unpaid, and by reason of the insufficiency of the guardian bond, as taken by Windley, clerk, etc., the relator is endamaged to the extent of said balance.

He also reports as to the solvency and liabilities of the sureties.

Before the referee the plaintiff introduced as evidence the record of the appointment of Ira H. Topping as guardian, etc., dated 1 May, 1874, to which defendants objected "as incompetent and insufficient."

He then introduced the guardian bond of Ira H. Topping, of the same date, signed by I. H. Topping and Mary E. Topping, which was objected to by defendants.

He then introduced the record of a special proceeding instituted in the Superior Court of the county of Hyde upon the petition of Ira H. Topping, guardian, to sell certain land of his ward therein named, showing the petition verified before Geo. L. Windley, clerk of the Superior Court of Beaufort, affidavits as to the benefits to the ward of such sale, the order of sale signed by W. A. Moore, judge, 9 May, 1874, report of the sale at the price of $650, the order of confirmation signed by (8) the clerk and approved by M. L. Eure, judge, order for title to the purchaser, and a certified copy of deed to the purchaser, all of which was objected to "as insufficient, irregular and for want of jurisdiction in the court to order the sale."

The plaintiff then introduced as a witness one W. J. Bullock, who testified that on 1 May, 1874, Mary Topping, the surety on the guardian bond, was insolvent, and that witness rented from the guardian the lands of his ward for three years, beginning either in 1874 or 1875, for which he paid $50 per year.

This witness was on the guardian bond of Ira H. Topping, executed 27 August, 1879, and Ira H. Topping being dead, his testimony was objected to as incompetent under section 590 of The Code. This witness also testified that he was insolvent in 1879, when he signed the bond as surety for the guardian, and that he at the time so told the clerk.

The defendants filed the following exceptions to the report of the referee:

1. For that it does not appear that Ira H. Topping was ever legally appointed guardian of Solomon Topping.

2. For that it does not appear that Ira Topping had any authority to sell the land of said Solomon Topping in Hyde County, and to receive the price with which he is charged.

3. For that said alleged sale was void and the land is still the property of its former owners.

4. That the order of said clerk did not authorize the receipt of the funds arising from the sale of the lands, without giving further security *Page 37 therefor; and the sale having taken place in Hyde County, the bond of this clerk is not liable for the funds arising from it.

5. For that the clerk refused to allow commissions to the guardian.

6. For that he has charged interest at 8 per cent, instead of 6 per cent as he should have done.

7. For that the clerk has found that over $270 worth of property (9) went into the supposed guardian's hands for which the clerk's bond was liable, when in truth and fact only about $83 did so go into the hands of said supposed guardian.

8. For that the clerk received and heard improper evidence, as indicated by the exceptions to the evidence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Grant v. . Reese
94 N.C. 720 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1886)
Burke v. . Turner
85 N.C. 500 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1881)
Humble v. . Mebane
89 N.C. 410 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 14, 99 N.C. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/topping-v-windley-nc-1888.