Wilson v. Gordon

61 S.E. 85, 81 S.C. 395, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 26, 1908
Docket7034
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 85 (Wilson v. Gordon) 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
Wilson v. Gordon, 61 S.E. 85, 81 S.C. 395, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 213 (S.C. 1908).

Opinions

The arguments in this case have been misplaced and there are none on file. *Page 396

The opinion herein was filed on April 7, 1908, but on petition for rehearing remittitur held up until

October 26, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This case having been heard by his Honor, Judge Purdy, he filed the following decree:

"This is an action brought by the plaintiff, M. Harvey Wilson, in his own right, and as administrator of the estate of Jane L. Gordon, deceased, and by the other plaintiffs, against the defendants for the partition of the real estate of the said Jane L. Gordon. Subsequently, M.H. Wilson, as administrator of the estate of Elizabeth C. Douglass, Anna McQuirk,, and J.T. McCord, L.T. Miller, as administrator of Mary V. Miller, and J.W. Kellar, as administrator of Louise A. Kellar, filed petitions asking to be made parties defendants to said cause and to be allowed to set up their claims as ultimate remaindermen under the eighth clause of the will of R.C. Gordon, deceased. The petitions were allowed, and said petitioners filed answers to said complaint, in which it is claimed that under the eighth clause of the will of R.C. Gordon a large amount of property and money went into the hands of Mary W. Gordon and Jane L. Gordon to be held by them under the limitations in the will of R.C. Gordon, and that the estate of Jane L. Gordon is liable to these defendants as ultimate remaindermen. By a previous order of this Court the shares of the parties to this action have been ascertained and fixed, and the only question now before the Court is the claim set up by the remaindermen, as above set forth. The parties to this action, other than the claimants, take the position that the whole matter is res judicata and rely upon a record in a case entitled `Jane L. Gordon, as administratrix of R.T. Gordon and in her own right, plaintiff, against Mary W. Gordon, M. Harvey *Page 397 Wilson, Georgia C. Miller, and others, legatees and devisees of R.C. Gordon, deceased, defendants.' In that complaint a full statement was made as to the condition of the estate of R.T. Gordon and the estate of R.C. Gordon, the plaintiffs alleging as follows, in the tenth paragraph of the complaint: "The plaintiff is embarrassed as to the disposition of the funds that will come into her hands as said administratrix by the conflicting claims of parties having or claiming an interest under the will of R.C. Gordon, deceased, and the different construction of their respective rights in the remainder, after the life estate, devised and bequeathed to R.T. Gordon under the seventh and eighth clauses of the will, and also as to the amount for which the said estate may be liable under said will to other parties. As said parties are numerous and widely scattered, and the plaintiff is advanced in years, she desires the aid and direction of this honorable Court to ascertain and settle the rights of all claimants that she may be able and ready to distribute such sums as may come into her hands among the parties entitled, and not to be compelled to endure risk and responsibility of holding the moneys of the estate of her intestate subject to the possibility of future protracted litigation. This plaintiff also in her own right claims an interest in the remainder under the eighth clause in the personal estate and in the real estate, exclusive of her right to a home under the will, which she desires to be ascertained and allotted to her.' The parties all answered, and the case was heard and decided by Judge Fraser, from which the appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, which is reported in 32 S.C. 563,11 S.E., 334. Subsequently, the case was again referred to the master for Abbeville county, and all the old records from the court of equity and the probate court were offered in evidence. The master made his report, to which all parties excepted. The case was heard on the exceptions by his Honor, Judge Norton, who filed a decree in the case, from which all parties appealed. Subsequently, an offer of compromise and settlement was proposed and accepted, and *Page 398 Judge Norton signed another order or decree, which was consented to by all the parties. By the terms of that decree, taken in connection with the pleadings, the testimony, the exceptions to the master's report, and the exceptions to the first decree of Judge Norton, it appears that all the matters attempted to be brought up by the answers of claimants herein have been conclusively settled by the former decree of Judge Norton, and are res judicata. It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the claims set up in the answers of the said administrators be and the same are hereby dismissed, and that said claimants pay the cost of this litigation brought about by said claims; that out of the proceeds of the sale of the land described in the complaint now in the hands of the master, and out of the funds hereafter to come into his hands from the said sale, the master do pay to M. Harvey Wilson, or his attorneys, one-twelfth of the net proceeds of sale, and that he hold the one-twelfth interest of Mrs. Jane W. Crymes subject to the further order of this Court; that he do pay to Evans Gordon and Georgia C. Miller, or their attorneys, each one-eighth of the net proceeds of sale; that he do pay to Samuel Kirkwood and Robert Kirkwood, or their attorneys, each one-eighth of the net proceeds of sale; that he do pay to Samuel A. McCord, Mary L.A. Perrin, Rebecca Faust, and Martha A. Patton, or their attorneys, each one-sixteenth of the net proceeds of sale; that each of said parties account to said master for any sums already received by them, and the same be deducted from their dues. A petition having been filed by Mr. W.N. Graydon in behalf of Robert N. Kirkwood seeking to subject the interest of Jane W. Crymes to the payment of an alleged debt, the said Robert N. Kirkwood may proceed herein to establish his said claim, and may apply for such orders as he may be advised are necessary or proper."

The appellants seek a reversal of this decree upon the following numerous exceptions: *Page 399

1. "Because his Honor erred in finding and holding that by the terms of the decree of Judge Norton made in the case of Jane L. Gordon, as administratrix of Robert T. Gordon, deceased, against Mary W. Gordon and others, taken in connection with the pleadings, testimony and exceptions to the master's report and the exceptions to the first decree, it appears that all the matters attempted to be set up by the answers of the claimants herein were settled by the former decree of Judge Norton, and are now res judicata, and erred in ordering that the claims set up in the answers of the appellants herein be dismissed and that the claimants pay the cost of this litigation, and erred in directing a distribution of the moneys now in the hands of the administrator and master among the claimants of the estate of Jane L. Gordon, deceased, the error being in the following particulars: (a) Because it had already been adjudicated in the case of Jane L. Gordon, as administratrix, against Mary W. Gordon, that these appellants, upon the death of Jane L. Gordon and Mary W. Gordon, would be entitled to the property received by them under the eighth clause of the will of Robert C. Gordon, and that their estates would be liable to account to these claimants for said property at their deaths and the death of the survivor of them. (b) The case of Jane L. Gordon, as administratrix, etc., against Mary W.

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Related

Wilson v. Gordon
66 S.E. 675 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 85, 81 S.C. 395, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-gordon-sc-1908.