Waring v. Purcell

10 S.C. Eq. 193
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 15, 1833
StatusPublished

This text of 10 S.C. Eq. 193 (Waring v. Purcell) 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
Waring v. Purcell, 10 S.C. Eq. 193 (S.C. Ct. App. 1833).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The testator, Thomas Smith, is represented to have died in September, 1830, and the first ground of this motion' arises out of the following clause of his will, which is preceded by divers specific bequests, to wit: — “ I also give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, of what nature and kind soever the same may be, to my sister Ann Purcell, for and during the term of her natural life; and from and immediately after her death, [136]*136over,” &c. At the time of his death, the testator owned and possessed a plantation and negroes, which passed under this clause of the will, but being indebted, the question is, whether the crop growing on the plantation at the death of the testator, is assets in the hands of the executor, or passed to the'defendant under the devise.

It is enacted by the Act of 1789, Pub. Laws, 494, that “if any person shall die after the first day of March in any year, the slaves of which he or she was possessed, whether held for life or absolutely, and who were employed in making a crop, shall be continued on the lands which were in the occupation of the deceased, until the crop is ^-finished, and then be delivered to those who have the right in them ; and such crop shall be assets in the executor or administrator’s hands, for the payment of debts, legacies and distribution,” the current expenses being paid out of it. The same clause of the act further provides, that “ emblements growing on the land, and which shall be severed before the last day of December, shall likewise be assets in the hands of the executor or administrator ; but that such as may be growing on the land at that day, or at the death of the testator, if that happen between the said last day of December, and the first day of March, shall pass with the lands;” and if any person shall rent or hire lands or slaves of a tenant for life, and such tenant for life dies, the person having such land and slaves, shall not be dispossessed, until the crop of that year is finished, he or she securing the payment of the rent or hire when due.

According to the common law, the annual productions of the soil growing at the death of the testator, went to the executor and not to the heir; and thus far our Act is in affirmance of the common law; but this rule did not sufficiently provide for the state of things existing here. In England, the executor had the same means of providing for the cultivation of the crop that the testator had, by hired laborers, over whom the testator had not the power of disposition. Here it is, for the most part, done by means of slaves belonging to the testator, which he may dispose of by will, and in case of intestacy, are distributable in the same manner as lands or chattels. If they were removed from the land after the crop was planted, and before it was finished, it would, in general, and especially on large plantations, be impossible to supply their places, and the crop would be lost. In cases of intestacy, without this Act there could be nothing to restrain the administrator from making immediate distribution of the personal estate to the destruction of the crop, and thus a fund might be lost to the distributees or creditors. The object of the legislature obviously was to guard against these consequences, by making it the duty of the executor or administrator to retain the slaves and lands until the crop was finished ; The estate ^ie ^anl^ an^ neg1'068 vests, as at common law, in the devisee or distributee, and the possession only is postponed by this Act. Regarding the provisions of this Act as merely arbitrary, it operates in cases of intestacy with perfect equality and for the benefit of all concerned ; by this means the growing crop is preserved, and is so much added to the general fund. The supposed injustice of applying it to a case of testacy disappears, when it is recollected that the testator may order it otherwise if he will. His power of disposition is unlimited, and the Act can only operate when he is silent, and doubtless many incon[137]*137veniences are remedied by it. The rule which it prescribes appears to me to be wise and salutary.

If the land had been devised to one, the slaves to another, and the beasts of the plough to a third, there could have been no doubt that the rule prescribed by the act should prevail; and I cannot perceive how the circumstance that the whole is devised to one, can vary it — the Act contains no such exception. The inference, that by the devise of the whole to one, the testator intended that she should also take the crop, would equally apply when it was to several; there would be the same facility in making distribution of the crop, as of the corpus of the estate. It will be perceived by reference to the last member of the clause of the Act above recited, that when lands or slaves are hired from a tenant for life, he shall retain them until the crop of that year is finished, “but shall secure the payment of the rent or hire, when dueand it has been contended, that under this provision, the executor or administrator shall pay rent and hire for lands and slaves retained by him under the first member of this section. But that is utterly inconsistent with the crop’s being assets in his hands, for the payment of debts or legacies. Besides that, it is most obvious that it was intended to provide for an entirely different case, the case of lands or slaves hired from a tenant for life— whilst the other was intended to provide generally for the ease of one dying possessed of lands and slaves in his own right, for both of which a perfect and entire system is provided, without the aid of the other.

*In a preceding clause of this will, the testator directs that his debts shall be paid out of “such moneys as may be due to me at the time of my death, in preference to any part of my estate or the income thereofand reliance, I observe, is placed on this, in aid of the intention of the testator, that Ann Purcell should take the growing crop, there being a fund set apart for the payment of debts. If I am right in supposing that the crop did not pass under the devise of the lands and negroes, it is wholly immaterial whether the fund set apart for the payment of debts was sufficient or not. If it was not, then the proceeds of the crop would go in aid of it; if it was, then it would be applicable to the payment of pecuniary legacies, and the remainder, if any, would sink into the residuum.

On the second ground, we concur with the Chancellor. The bequest to .Sarah Hutchinson is of “five hundred dollars’ annuity to be paid her out of the income of my estate, on the first day of March in every year.” The bequest could not take effect until the death of the testator He died in September, and the whole annuity would not be dqe until the September of the following year. But it was to be paid on the first of March in every year; and we think it comports best with the intention of the testator, that she should be paid on the first day of March next after his death, a proportion of the annuity equal to the time which had run after his death;

It is, therefore, ordered and decreed, that the decree of the Circuit Court be reformed according to the principles of this decree.

O’Neall and Harper, Js., concurred.

After the first decree, this case was again heard at Charleston in January, 1832, on. exceptions to the report of the Commissioner, on the [138]*138reference previously ordered. The following decree presents the only question then raised, and the facts connected with it.

*De Saussure, Chancellor.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.C. Eq. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waring-v-purcell-scctapp-1833.