Ross v. Wharton
Ross v. Wharton
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
William T. Ross is the administrator of Wm. D. Thompson deseased, who in the summer of 1834, intermarried with Susan S. Fain, the widow and relict of Samel Fain, deceased. Thompson in the early part of the year 1835 departed this life, leaving his wife surviving. Her first husband died intestate, and his widow and two infant children who survived him, were entitled to distribution of his personal estate, which was large, consisting then of twenty-four negroes and now of thirty or upwards, and of stock, household furniture &c., and debts due to him. Administration on his estate was granted to his widow, and to George R. Wharton, and the bill alledges that the former attended chiefly to the administration of the personal estate, that nearly all the debts had been paid, that the negroes remained upon the farm of the deceased, where lived the widow with her infant children, that they had never been divided up to the time of Thompson’s death and have not yet been, that the negroes were taken and held by the ad-
But the administrator who is aho the co-distributee of others, is subjected to no such necessity. To make anything of the analogy insisted on, a case must be selected where the administrator is sole distributee, as the father who administers upon the estate of an unmarried son, or the husband to recover the choses in action of his deceased wife. In such case, exceptas to creditors, the administrator would be owner, and debts being paid, could by operation of law and without suit claim as such. And second, it is said that though for two years after administration granted, the administrator would be pi esumed to hold in that character, yet after two years the presumptions oflaw are reversed, and he-is to betaken to have held as distributee. This legal postulate we do not think is established by the cases referred to for that purpose. 4 Mason 136: 6 Yer. Bosly vs. Carroll. These were cases where the administrator having also become guardian and being himself liable in both characters, his securities in the latter character, and not in the first, were held liable; not upon a presumption arising from operation of time merely, but from the act done, tbe assumption of guardianship and giving bond. It would be very unsafe on the ground of such presumption to permit a trustee receiving and holding property in that character, to denude himself of the trust by the supposed operas tions of his own mind and will, and without any positive act done to apprise all interested of such a change of character. But it is said again that a distributive share may he assimilated
The assent ofan executor is necessary to give to the legatee a title to claim and receive the legacy, because he is supposed to be acquainted with the state of the debts and the assets, and to know whether the legatee will be called on for contribution ■or not. But a distributive share is very unlike a-legacy, and if it were not, we would say similis non est idem. When was it ever heard in the same sense, that an administrator assented to a distributive share. A legacy is the gift of the testator, a distributive share of the law-, and if there be any resemblance between them, it is between a distributive share and ■a general residuary legacy, after the payment of all debts ■and all other legacies, in which last case it would be difficult perhaps to find much on the subject "of the executor’s assent in behalf either of himself or others. We think the authorities prove, that a possession such as Thompson had in this case, cannot be regarded as a reduction of the property of the wife into possession so as to defeat hep title by survivorship. In the case of Baker vs. Hall, 12 Ves. Rep. Hall was sole ex ecutor, and having proved the will, he entered upon and took possession of the real and personal estates of the testator, and afterwards disposed of part thereof. He married Elizabeth Baker one of the residuary devisees under the will, and died leaving her surviving; and one question in the case was whether Hall by entering into possession of the real and personal es-tateof the testator, as the only acting executor and trustee under the will, and disposing of part, had sufficiently reduced into possession his wife’s share, so as to give him an absolute title transmissible to his representatives. And as to that question the master of the rolls said, “the-husband must be considered to have entered into possession of the real and personal estate of the testator, as trustee and executor of the will only, and not as husband, and therefore his wife’s share of the residue would not be deemed sufficiently reduced into possession so as to prevent its surviving to her upon his dec ease.”
And in a case in 16 Ves. 415, it was determined, that the actual transfer of stock standing in the name of the wife to the
It is true as was determined in the case in 1 Yer. Rep. 413, that administrators, who are also distributees, are not under all circumstances to bring suit for petition or distribution, but they and the other distributees may agree upon and adjust the terms of settlement among themselves. But iii the cases in South Carolina, and in this case, that could not be done. Here were infants of tender years and without guardians, so far as appears; at least the partition was not in fact made, and it is
And finally, it is said for complainant that whatever may turn out to be the rights of the parties upon investigating the facts, yet the demurrer looks to the allegations of the bill, and cannot be sustained, because the bill alleges that Thompson held the negroes undivided for his own use and benefit, as io one third, and not as administrator. The bill states that the ne-groes of the estate of Fain all continued upon the farm, where also lived the widow and children, that they were taken and held by the wife as administratrix-. Circumstances and relations with regard to the property and the parties, are stated in the bill, inconsistent with the averment, that Thompson held an undivided third part for his own use and benefit, and not as administrator. No act is alleged to have been done, no fact is averred* the operation of which in point of law could control or ch tnge the circumstances and relations with regard to the parties and properly which previously existed. Certainly the alleged exchange of one or two of the negroes for others could not have that- effect.' We thiede,-''therefore, that the de
Decree affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.