Shumate v. Harbin
Shumate v. Harbin
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mrs. Gilly Roberts, a widow, on the 5th
June, 1880, purchased a small lot, one-third of an acre, in the
•On the 20th day of April, 1889, the said Shumate began his action in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County in this State against B. D. Harbin, Gilly Harbin, his wife, and the infant, Michael J. Roberts, as defendants, the summons therein being served by publication. The adult defendants answered as to the merits of the action. The infant defendant had a guardian ad litem appointed, and answered by such guardian ad litem. The issues being equitable, were tried by his honor, Judge Izlar. At the hearing, the defendants interposed the oral demurrer, that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The presiding judge, however, held the same under advisement, and allowed all parties to present all the testimony they desired in the questions raised in the pleadings. The foregoing summary presents the salient facts as developed by the pleadings
The result of all the cases bearing upon this relief, peculiar to Courts of Equity, is that it is not what such improvements may. have cost in dollars and cents that is allowed, but what additional value has been imparted to the premises by such improvements-Lewis v. Price, supra. The court said: “At the same time, I am content, in this case, that the tenant should have credit, not for the cost of improvements, but for the value they imparted to the premises” (italics ours). The principles announced in the foregoing cases were made to apply, notwithstanding some of the co-tenants were infants. We acknowledge these are cases between co-tenants. They are cited by way of illustration of certain principles of equity. Let it be remembered, also, that the improvements, in these cases referred to, were made without the sanction of the court in the first instance. In the case of Buck, Hefflebower & Neer v. Martin, supra, this court said: “We do not regard the rule, that the improving co-tenant is not entitled to compensation, as applying to all the cases where all the co-tenants concur in the improvements. From the peculiar circumstances
Recurring to the^case at bar, here was a destitute family, consisting of mother, stepfather, infant son, not only without money, but homeless. It was not the duty of the mother and stepfather to support the infant son. Buck and others v. Martin, supra; Lewis v. Price, supra. The son was only ten years of age, with no general or testamentary guardian ; but his mother was his guardian by nature. As such, in the absence of one appointed by law, the mother is naturally expected to fill that office, and thousands of boys and girls, bereft by death of a father’s care and protection, rise up and proclaim their mother blessed. By nature and education timid and retiring, when the interests of the fatherless need her protecting care, all obstacles are surmounted, all dangers bravely met. Under these circumstances, the plaintiff builds the modest home for their occupancy, believing the title in .the mother. What before was useless, because untenantable, by the labor and means of plaintiff expended thereon, becomes not only a home fit for their occupancy, but when not so used by them afterwards, it became a source of revenue — $60 per year is its rental value.
Now, because it was not Mrs. Harbin’s land, because the plaintiff made a mistake, because she is not her son’s legal guardian, becauseshe is not a tenant in common with him, because she is not administrator or executor of the estate of his father, because of these things, must this plaintiff lose all compensation for this work? We do not think so. This court in the case of Spencer
But while so holding, we must be clearly understood to decide that not the cost of such improvements, but the value they impart to the premises, is the true rule. The property should be rented by the master of Greenville County, and after the payment of the master’s fees and all taxes, the residue of such rent should be paid over to the plaintiff until he shall receive his debt of if149.54; and when the plaintiff shall have been so satisfied, the property should be rented for the benefit of its owner, Michael J. Roberts, until he obtains a guardian to manage the same, or reaches the age of twenty-one years. We feel constrained, however, in this instance, to instruct that there shall be no costs taxed against the infant defendant.
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause remanded to the Circuit Court, with directions that the principles of this decree be duly enforced in that court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SHUMATE v. HARBIN
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Jurisdiction — -Subject Matter — Parties.—A mother residing with her infant son in this State contracted with a builder for the repair of a house in this State belonging to the infant, and afterwards removed to another State with her son and second husband. The builder brought action against the mother and her son and husband, procured order of publication, and had the summons published. The mother and her husband appeared and answered, and also the infant by guardian ad litem duly appointed. Held, that the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, and that mother and son were necessary parties and the husband a proper party. 2. Infants — Improved Property — Equity.—Where the mother of a fatherless child contracts for necessary repairs to a house belonging to the infant, without which repairs the house would be useless and unprofitable, the contractor believing at the time that it is the property of the mother, the Court of Equity will give to the contractor for his reasonable charges a claim against the property to the extent to which his work has added to its value. To this end, it was ordered that the master rent the premises and apply the proceeds to the payment of taxes and master’s fees, then to the payment of the contractor's debt; and after that it should be rented for the benefit of the infant — the costs of the action not to be taxed against the infant.