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Johnson v. Chapman

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1853
54 N.C. 130 (N.C. 1853)

Opinion

(December Term, 1853.)

Contribution to make up the share of a child born after the execution of his father's will, under the act of Assembly of 1808, must be made by the legatees, in proportion to their respective interests under the will, rated as of the time when the estate was settled, or should have been settled, by the executor, bearing interest from such time.

THE question in this case arises out of exceptions taken to the report of the Commissioner, to whom it was referred to take an account of the estate of Frederick Johnson, Sr., by a decree of this Court at June Term, 1853, which is reported in 45 N.C. 213. The nature of the exceptions sufficiently appear from the opinion of the Court.

J. H. and J. W. Bryan, for plaintiff.

Donnell, for defendants. (131)


The exceptions of the defendants raise the question, at what time ought the valuation of the slaves and other property which was secured by the legatees to be made for the purpose of ascertaining the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled as his share of the estate? The Commissioner adopted the principle of valuing such of the slaves and their increase as are still retained by the legatees at the time of making the report and adding the amount of hires that had been or might have been received up to that time, and of valuing such as had been disposed of at the time they were sold and adding thereto interest up to the time of the sale of each respectively. The exceptions insist that the correct principle was to fix the value of those received by the widow at the time she received them and of those received by the two daughters at the time they received them. We do not think either principle correct and are satisfied that the true principle is to adopt the valuation at the time the estate was settled, or ought to have been settled; that is, as soon after the death of the testator as a settlement could have been made consistently with the rights of creditors. This was adopted as the principle upon which to ascertain the amount to which a widow who dissents is entitled as her share of the personal estate ( Hunter v. Husted, 45 N.C. 98), and it commends itself as the principle upon which to ascertain the amount to which a child born after the death of the testator, for whom the will makes no provision, is entitled. It is based on these reasons:

1st. It produces uniformity to act upon the rule in reference to an after-born child, which has been adopted in reference to a widow who dissents. So an advancement is valued when received, without reference to a subsequent increase or falling off in value.

2d. No other rule will make the sums to be contributed by the (132) legatees equal and conform to the maxim, "Equality is equity." Upon the principle adopted by the Commissioner each legatee is made to contribute a different amount. Why should a legatee who was fortunate enough to keep his slaves be rated higher, because of the fact that they have increased and the price of slaves was high at the date of the report, than the one whose slaves were sold many years ago? Why should one be charged with the amount which might have been received for hire while the other is only charged with six per cent upon the amount for which his slaves sold? This of necessity will produce inequality as between the legatees in every case, to say nothing of the difficulty of fixing on the proper amount to be charged for hire after the expiration of many years, when scarcely any two witnesses will agree as to the hire that might have been obtained in any one year, and of the hardship of charging one with negro hire for a series of years during which, in fact, they were not hired out, and he acted with them and used such profits as he made as if he was the absolute owner? Almost any man, according to the ordinary way of using slaves, would be ruined if, after some thirty years, he is called to a strict account as if the negroes had been hired out.

3d. In this way an after-born child will receive the exact amount to which he is entitled, and the amount will be fixed and certain, and will not depend upon the accident of death of negroes and a fall in prices on the one hand, or upon their increase or a rise in prices on the other.

In support of the principle acted on by the Commissioner, it was insisted that the plaintiff is not merely entitled to one-fourth the value of the slaves, but to one-fourth of the slaves specifically, and therefore has an Equity to follow the fund and require of the executor an account of his breach of trust, and of the legatees, on the footing of being a tenant in common, one-fourth of the present value of the slaves and their increase, together with the profits that might have been (133) made. This position is untenable — neither the premises nor the conclusion are correct. An after-born child is not entitled to a part of the property specifically under the act of 1808. The object was to provide for him, but there is nothing to justify an interference with the dispositions of the will, except so far as it is necessary to accomplish that object. Such a child is put on a middle ground between that of a specific and a general legatee. If there is a surplus out of which the amount to which he is entitled can be raised it should be applied to that purpose. If there is no surplus the 4th section requires the legatees to contribute. So he stands on higher ground than a general, but lower than a specific, legatee. Even a specific legatee, however, has no right in rem and is not considered in Equity as the owner of the property, for the executor does not hold the property as a mere trustee. The interest of the legatee cannot be sold as a trust under the act of 1812; and if the executor sells the property the legatee cannot follow it in the hands of a purchaser, although he might with notice. The extent of the Equity of the legatee is to have the property delivered to him specifically, provided it is not necessary to sell for the payment of creditors, but remains in the hands of the executor. The doctrine of following the fund has no application. It is a principle of Equity that when a trustee converts the fund and for the purpose of speculation invests it in slaves or merchandise or anything else, the cestui que trust has his election to call for the original fund with interest on it if the investment turns out badly, or to claim the benefit if it has been profitable. This is a departure from the general rule that "he who runs the risk should take the gain." The exception is made for the purpose of removing all temptation to misapply the fund by attempting to speculate upon what belongs to another. The doctrine, however, is confined to cases of pure trust when the cestui que trust is considered in Equity as the owner of the fund. It never has been applied (134) to the case of an executor or administrator.

In our case, so far as the executor is concerned, the doctrine can have no application; for a further reason, he did not attempt to make gain by a conversion of the slaves, and "the head and front of his offending" is that he delivered them over to the legatees and omitted to take care of the interest of the plaintiff as the statute makes it his duty to do. So far as the legatees are concerned, they held no fiduciary relation towards the plaintiff, and did not receive the slaves as tenants in common with him, but in their own right, as that to which they were entitled under the will, and the statute simply makes them liable to contribution, not to give up any of the specific property. So the extent of the plaintiff's Equity, as was declared in the former decree, is to have a lien on the property so as to secure the amount to which he is entitled.

The legacies to the daughters, although not to be delivered until marriage or arrival at age, never vested or conferred a present right; so they stand in regard to the settlement on the same footing with the widow: when she received her part the settlement was made as to all; a valuation of the whole estate at that time will fix the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled, with interest.

No exception being taken to the report in regard to the land, it is in that respect confirmed. It is set aside as to the rest and referred back to the Commissioner to state the account according to these directions.

Decree accordingly.

(135)


Summaries of

Johnson v. Chapman

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1853
54 N.C. 130 (N.C. 1853)
Case details for

Johnson v. Chapman

Case Details

Full title:FREDERICK JOHNSON, JR., against DAVID CHAPMAN, EXECUTOR, AND OTHERS

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1853

Citations

54 N.C. 130 (N.C. 1853)

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