Citation Numbers: 39 S.C. 247, 17 S.E. 587, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 114
Judges: Aldrich
Filed Date: 5/11/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The statements contained in the “Case” herein are very vague and meagre, and we have had great difficulty in ascertaining what facte were before the Circuit Judge. The “Case,” including the decree of his honor, Judge Wallace, should be included in the report of the case.
Bensom M. Jones, the intestate, at the time of his death, owned and operated a tannery in this State. On November 22d, 1876, appellant herein, as administrator of said intestate, procured an order from the Probate Court of Newberry County, which gave him “leave to continue the business” of the tannery, “until the further order of this court in the premises.” Under this order, appellant, in the conduct of said business, received $13,552, and paid out $12,923.84, which left a balance of $628.16 in the hands of appellant. Appellant claimed commissions for receiving said $13,552, and for paying out said $12,923.84. The probate judge disallowed appellant’s claim for commissions, except on the balance of $628.16, which he
The common law, or as many of the writers term it, “the general rule,” above stated, was superseded in this State by the act of assembly of 1745, amended in 1789, and now incorporated in the General Statutes as section 1945. College of Charleston v. Willingham, supra. This act, briefly stated, allows an administrator or executor, for his “care, trouble and attendance” in the execution of his duties, to “take, receive or retain” in his hands a sum not exceeding two and a half per cent, on each dollar which he “shall receive,” and a like commission on each dollar he “shall pay away in credits, debts, legacies or otherwise, during the course and continuance” of their “managements or administrations.” Said act. also allows administrators or executors a sum, as commissions, which shall not exceed ten per cent, on the dollar, on all money received as “interest” from money of the estate lent out, asan investment, during the continuance of the administration. Section 1946 gives to an executor or administrator “who shall have had
The act allows commissions on money — “dollars”—and not on property; the idea being that the commissions for receiving were meant as compensation for converting property into money, and the commissions for paying away were intended as compensation for ascertaining to whom the money was due, and then paying it to such person. Commissions have been allowed, in a number of cases, in favor of administrators and executors upon bonds, notes,- accounts, &c.; but the basis of each decision was the fact that these bonds, notes, accounts, &c., had been used in lieu of money, the principle being that that which was used as money, in equity and fairness, should be regarded and considered as money.
The reasoning in the following cases support the above proposition. An executor retained commissions on specific legacies delivered, and the legatee sued the executor to recover the commissions retained. The judgment was in favor of the legatees. Chancellor DeSaussure, in his decree, which was affirmed, says: “It has always appeared to me that the ground for compensation to executors being made by law to rest solely on the foundation of money received and paid away, was not a perfectly reasonable rule; inasmuch as there is often great service performed by executors when only small sums of money are received and paid away. But I do apprehend the law to be clear on that point, and I'do not feel myself at liberty to depart from it. I do not sit here to make law, but to administer it.” Ruff v. Executors of Summers, 4 DeSaus., 530. The distributees purchased property at the executor’s sales, and gave bonds for purchase money; and the executors were held to be entitled to commissions on the amount of the bonds delivered to the distributees respectively, and set off against their claims to shares of the estate. Deas v. Spann, Harp. Eq., 176; Gist v. Gist, 2 McCord Ch., 473, explained in Ball v. Brown, Ball. Eq., 374; Kiddle v. Hammond, Harp. Eq., 223. In Kiddle v. Hammond,
An extreme case, by way of illustration, will show the reason of the law. Suppose a fishmonger, who daily bought and sold $100 worth of fish, should die intestate, and his administrator, by leave of the court, should continue the business for forty days. At the expiration of the forty days, the administrator will have “received” $4,000 and “paid away” $4,000 in the purchase and sale of fish. If he should be allowed commissions for receiving and paying out $4,000, the estate will owe him $200 as commissions, and the result would be that the administrator could credit his commissions account with the $100, the corpus of the estate, and apply the profits of his forty .days’ business, if any, towards the payment of the $100 still due. If such a principle was recognized, it would enable administrators, if so inclined, to actually destroy estates for their own advantage.
If appellant had made a profit in his management of the tannery business, we might, by analogy, allow him commissions on the profits, just as commissions are allowed by the act upon “interest” earned by lending out the money of the estate. But instead of profit being made, the estate has lost by the tannery business. We think that the plaintiff, appellant, is not entitled to commissions on the $13,552 paid out and received “in the management of the tannery.”
All that appellant can show for that property, as well as from the management thereof, is $628.16. The loss of $4,328.09, on property appraised at $4,956.25, may be due to misfortune or accident, though there is no evidence that such was the case. Appellant, so far as the “Case” shows, kept no separate account of the sale of the appraised property, hence we cannot say how much it was sold for. Perhaps the property was old, the appraisers may have overestimated the quantity, may have been mistaken as to the quality, or erred in fixing its value. So far as we can tell, the “appraised” property may have been sold for $628.16, the amount now in the hands of appellant. The Probate Court did not charge appellant the “appraised” value of the property. We are inclined to think that the case stands upon the rule covering property which is lost while in the hands of administrators pending a sale thereof. If, for instance, an administrator receives a horse belonging to his intestate’s estate, appraised at $100, and the horse should die before the sale of the assets of the estate, the administrator could not charge commissions on the “appraised” value of said horse. We must overrule this exception; but this ruling is made without prejudice to appellant’s applying, if he so desires, to the Probate Court for compensation for his time and services rendered in carrying on the tannery business, under the order of that court. Upon that subject we express no opinion.
If the law of North Carolina is the same as the law of this State and the common law, appellant, in taking possession of the assets of intestate, and paying the debts of intestate out of said assets in North Carolina, made himself executor de son tort in that State. Howell v. Smith, 2 McCord, 516; Givens v. Higgins, 4 McCord, 286; Gen. Stat., § 1905; 2 Laws. R. R. & P., § 983. Appellant’s claim to be allowed, in his accounting in South Carolina, credit for the payments made in North Carolina, rests upon the assumption that he, as the administrator of intestate in South Carolina, his domicil, had the right to collect and disburse the money in North Carolina; or that his acts in North Carolina made him executor de son tort of intestate’s estate in that State, and that whatever he did as executor de son tort was proper a.nd right. To make a party liable as executor de son tort, he must be sued as executor. Gregory v. Forrester, 1 McCord’s Ch., 326; and there is no such suit in this State against appellant. The litigation in North Carolina, which the probate judge says is about to be started, may be against this appellant as executor de son tort. An executor de son tort, as the term implies, is a trespasser, and it is an offence against the laws of the country in which the trespass is committed. How could a court in South Carolina acquire juris
Does plaintiff’s appointment as administrator justify his acts in North Carolina? Generally speaking, and without attempting to state the exceptions to the rule, when a person dies intestate, owning personal property in the country of his domicile as well as in a foreign country, administration is had in both countries. The administration taken out in the country in which intestate resided is called the domiciliary or principal administration. It is the duty of such an administrator to collect the assets of the estate, pay the debts,, if any are due, and distribute the remainder among the distributees of the intestate. The administration in the foreign country is called auxiliary or ancillary, and the duty of such an administrator is to collect the assets of the estate, and. pay the debts due by intestate, especially debts due to citizens of that country. Each country claims and exercises the right to see that debts due to its citizens are paid before the assets of the estate are taken out of its jurisdiction. After the debts are satisfied, the ancillary administrator, under the law of nations, resting upon comity and broad principles of justice, may transmit the residuum to the administrator of the domicile, to be there disposed of according to the law of the domicile. Story Confl. Laws, 851, § 514, also page 840, § 512; 1 Woer. Am. Law Adm., 375, § 167; Tucker v. Condy, 10 Rich. Eq., 12; Cureton v. Mills, 13 S. C., 430; Graveley v. Graveley, 25 Id., 2; 3 Wms. Ex’rs, § 1664; Dial v. Gary, 14 S. C., 573; Stevenson v. Dunlap, 33 Id., 350.
Appellant contends, that inasmuch as the North Carolina debtor or debtors voluntarily paid their indebtedness to him, he had the right to receive the same, and to apply it to the indebtedness of his intestate. In the leading case of Wilkins v. Ellett, 9 Wall., 740, the law is stated as follows: “A voluntary payment of a debt to a foreign administrator held good as against the claim of an administrator duly appointed at the domicile of the debtor, in which last place the debt was paid, there having been no creditors of the intestate in this last place, nor any persons there entitled as distributees.” (Italics ours.) This is
It follows, therefore, that there was no error in disallowing the payments made in North Carolina on debts due there. This being so, appellant should not be charged in his accounts with any collections made from assets in that State, and the accounts should be recast accordingly when the accounting ordered by the Circuit Judge is had.
The second exception is: “Because his honor erred in not allowing plaintiff credit in his accounts as administrator for payment of three hundred and thirteen 65-100 dollars upon open accounts at different times.” His honor did not disallow the entire item of $313.65, stated to have been paid “on open accounts at different times,” but did disallow so much of that sum, viz., $313.65, as was “paid upon open accounts in North Carolina.” We have already considered these North Carolina transactions, and these payments stand upon the same footing as the payments made to Miss Woodfin. As appellant, in the recasting of the accounts, will not be charged with collections made in North Carolina, we must overrule this exception.
Third exception: “Because, in any event, his honor erred in not allowing the plaintiff credit in his accounts as administrator for the payments made to Miss Woodfin, and the payments on the North Carolina accounts, to the extent that he allowed plaintiff credit for the payments mentioned - in the I., II., IV., V. and VI. and part of the VII. exceptions to probate judge’s decree.” We must overrule this exception. Under the circumstances of this case, we agree with the Circuit Judge, that the Probate Court of Newberry had no jurisdiction as to appellant’s
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.