Court Opinion

ID: 3882266
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:13:22.500015+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:57.824510
License: Public Domain

This is a most extraordinary case, and, in view of the setting, I am not at all satisfied with the result attained by the Circuit decree.
About the year 1910 a colored man by the name of Lexius Henson, with his wife Hattie, and two small children, aged 4 and 6 respectively, moved from Augusta, Ga., and took up his residence in Anderson, S.C. He was a painter of automobiles, carriages, and other vehicles, and established a business in his new home. About the year 1917 he and his wife separated, both apparently, however, continuing to reside in Anderson. In the fall of 1920 the wife died, and shortly thereafter Henson carried the two children, who were then 14 and 16, to Augusta for the purpose of placing them with the parents of his dead wife. There is no evidence in the case tending to show that he intended to change his domicile from Anderson to Augusta. The inference from the fact that he left at Anderson his clothing, watch, *Page 216 
tools of trade, household goods, and a deposit of about $1,700 in the Bank of Anderson is that he intended to return to his home and business in Anderson. While in Augusta upon the mission related, he contracted pneumonia and died there on November 21, 1920, soon after his arrival. On January 5, 1921, one Parris Pryor applied to the Court of Ordinary of Richmond County, Georgia, of which county Augusta is the County Seat, for general letters of administration upon the estate of Henson. They were granted him, and he was duly appointed and qualified as such administrator. The appraisal of the estate in that proceeding showed the assets to be $1,997, which consisted of the deposit in the Bank of Anderson and about $200 in the Bank of Waynesboro, Burke County, Ga.
On February 3, 1921, shortly after his qualification, Parris Pryor, the administrator appointed by the Ordinary of Richmond County, Ga., presenting a certified copy of his letters of administration, drew out of the Bank of Anderson the deposit which was in the savings department of that bank to the credit of Henson, amounting to $1,768.
On April 18, 1922, nearly 18 months after the death of Henson, and 14 months after the deposit had been drawn out by the administrator, a paper purporting to be the last will and testament of Henson was presented to the Court of Probate of Anderson County, and admitted to probate in common form as his will. No one was named as executor of the will, and thereafter the plaintiff S.M. Wolfe applied for letters of administration cum testamento annexo, they were granted to him, and he was duly appointed and qualified as such administrator.
The will which was admitted to probate as stated bequeathed the entire estate, in the event that the testator died a widower, to his friend and attorney, the plaintiff herein.
The administrator c. t. a. contended that the Bank of Anderson was without authority to pay the amount of the deposit to the Georgia administrator, and, to decide that *Page 217 
contention, a "controversy without action" was submitted to the Court of Common Pleas, in which the facts as hereinbefore substantially stated were set forth in detail. The issue to be determined was thus indicated:
"That the question of law to be determined by the Court based upon the foregoing agreed statement of facts herein is the liability, if any, on the part of the defendant, Bank of Anderson, to the plaintiff, as administrator with will annexed and beneficiary under the will of Lexius P. Henson, deceased, in Anderson County, state aforesaid, by virtue of its payment and surrender of the deposit to the credit of the account of the said Lexius P. Henson at the time of his death, and upon the date upon which it was drawn in the sum of $1,768, to the said Parris R. Pryor, as administrator in Richmond County, Ga."
The case came on to be heard by Hon. G.B. Green, special Judge, at Anderson, at a time not stated in the record, and after argument of counsel the special Judge filed a decree (not dated in the record, but apparently prior to July 26, 1922), in which he held that the payment of the deposit by the bank to the Georgia administrator was unauthorized, and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the bank for $1,768. From this judgment, duly entered up, the defendant has appealed.
The special Judge has found as a fact, not appealed from, that at the time of his death Henson had his residence and domicile in the City of Anderson, and was only temporarily absent in the City of Augusta — a conclusion reasonably inferable from the evidence and settled as a fact in the case. It does not appear that there were any creditors of Henson in the State of South Carolina; the inference being very strong that there were none, from the fact that no creditors, during the period between the death of Henson in November, 1920, and the probate of the will in April, 1922, made any effort to be appointed administrator, or to have the *Page 218 
clerk of Court appointed, and from the further fact that he left on hand about $2,000.
The question to be determined may be stated thus: A person having his residence and domicile in this state, but owing no debts, while temporarily absent from this state, dies in another state. What purport to be general letters of administration upon his estate are granted by the Court of such other state having jurisdiction of such matters. The administrator of the foreign state collects from a debtor who lives in this state a debt due by him to the intestate. Is the debtor liable to pay the debt again to an administrator subsequently appointed by the Court of this State?
A subsidiary question, which in my opinion is determinative of the main question, is this Is the Georgia administration domiciliary or ancillary, and, if not inherently domiciliary, is the plaintiff in a position to contend that it is ancillary?
I do not think that there can be any doubt under the authorities which I shall cite that, if the Georgia administration be domiciliary, or if the plaintiff is not in a position to contest that conclusion, there being no South Carolina creditors, the Georgia administrator had the right to collect the debt due by the South Carolina debtor, and of consequence the acquittance of the Georgia administrator is a complete protection to the South Carolina debtor.
It is equally clear that, if the Georgia administration be ancillary only, the powers of the Georgia administrator were halted at the state line, and he had no authority to cross that line and exercise the powers of an administrator in South Carolina. It would follow that his collection of the debt was unauthorized and his acquittance no defense to the bank.
If the plaintiff be in a position to raise the question of domiciliary or ancillary administration, it is clear from the evidence that the place of the intestate's domicile was in South Carolina. He had lived here for 10 years. He had *Page 219 
returned to Georgia for a temporary purpose, and, as shown above, the findings of the presiding Judge unappealed from settle this question.
The vital question therefore is whether or not the plaintiff is in a position to raise the issue. I do not think that he is, for the following reasons:
Assuming for the moment that the Court of Ordinary in Georgia is practically a Court of the same jurisdiction and powers as the Court of Probate in this State, it is settled by numerous decisions that the latter is a Court of record, of great dignity, and, while not strictly a Court of general jurisdiction, the same rules of construction are to be made in favor of its jurisdiction and the effect of its records as are applied to Courts of general jurisdiction.
In the case of Hendrix v. Holden, 58 S.C. 495,36 S.E., 1010, the precise point was raised and decided. There it was held that the grant of letters of administration by a Court of Probate must be presumed regular in all respects when questioned in another proceeding, unless the defects appear affirmatively upon the face of the record. See Herman on Estoppel, § 140; Thomas v. Poole, 19 S.C. 336;Turner v. Malone, 24 S.C. 398. In Clark v. Neves, 76 S.C. 484,57 S.E., 614, 12 L.R.A. (N.S.), 298, it is said:
"The rule which applies as to Courts of general jurisdiction applies also to the Court of Probate."
The Court was then discussing collateral attacks upon the judgment of Courts of general jurisdiction.
In Petigru v. Ferguson, 6 Rich. Eq., 378, referring to the Ordinary, the Court says:
"This judicial officer, having a general cognizance of questions relating to the right of administration, and therefore being legally competent to determine them, must necessarily be clothed with authority to consider and decide the sufficiency of the evidence presented to him for establishing the facts from which the right arises. The judgment *Page 220 
rendered by him must be conclusive of the facts necessary to sustain it until it is reversed. It cannot be impeached collaterally, and can only be set aside by a direct proceeding."
The very point involved in that case was the validity of the appointment of an administrator which was attacked upon the matter of residence.
In Ex parte Crafts, 28 S.C. 281, 5 S.E., 718, the Court says:
"And when such other person is appointed by the Probate Court, being a Court of record, and having jurisdiction of the subject, it is a judicial act, a judgment, which must be assumed to have been rightly rendered until the contrary appears" — citing Petigru v. Ferguson, 6 Rich. Eq., 384.
In Ex parte White, 38 S.C. 41, 16 S.E., 286 (quoting from the syllabus), it is held:
"The Court of Probate, though of limited jurisdiction, is a Court of record, and not an inferior Court, as to matters clearly within its jurisdiction. Therefore its grant of administration may be vacated only by a direct proceeding."
In Hartley v. Glover, 56 S.C. 69, 33 S.E., 796, it is held:
"The appointment of an administrator is in the nature of a judgment, and, unless it appears affirmatively from an inspection of the records that there was a failure to comply with the requirements of law, it will be presumed that the Probate Judge followed the requirements of law, and that the administrator was properly appointed."
In Hankinson v. Railroad Co., 41 S.C. 1,19 S.E., 206, it is held:
"It is contended, however, that the judgment of the Court of Probate, evidenced by the certified copy of the letters of administration, cannot be attacked in this collateral proceeding. This depends upon whether the judgment in question is absolutely void or is merely voidable. If the *Page 221 
former, then it is a mere nullity, and may be so treated wherever it is encountered, but, if the latter, then it cannot be attacked in any collateral proceeding, but must be avoided — that is, rendered void — by some direct proceeding instituted for that purpose."
In the case of In re Mears, 75 S.C. 482, 56 S.E., 7, 9
Ann. Cas., 960, it is said:
"There is support in reason and authority for the proposition that, after discovery of a will, administration previously granted cannot be impeached in a collateral proceeding, and can be annulled only by a direct proceeding."
The rule in Georgia is exactly the same:
"The Court of Ordinary is a Court of general jurisdiction, and it is not essential that all the facts necessary to give jurisdiction shall appear upon the face of the record. Where the record is silent, the presumption is that all necessary jurisdictional facts appeared, and no collateral attack can be made upon the judgment. Maybin v. Knighton,67 Ga. 103; Stuckey v. Watkins, 112 Ga. 268." Jones v.Smith, 120 Ga. 642, 48 S.E., 134.
"The judgment appointing the Joneses administrators on the estate of Lamar being regular upon its face, it cannot be collaterally attacked." Id.
"A judgment of a Court of Ordinary granting letters of administration upon an estate, being a judgment of a Court of general jurisdiction, cannot be collaterally attacked, unless the record negatives the existence of necessary jurisdictional facts." Quoting from syllabus, Wash v. Dickson, 147 Ga. 540,94 S.E., 1009.
There is nothing in the record for appeal showing that the record of the Court of Ordinary in Georgia in appointing an administrator negatived the evidence of jurisdictional facts; and hence it should be concluded that it is immune from a collateral attack, as this is, and should be treated as a domiciliary administration subject, of course, to such *Page 222 
attack as the plaintiff in the appropriate proceedings may institute.
The administration in Georgia then being considered, for the purposes of this case, as a domiciliary administration, the law is well settled that a domiciliary administrator may collect debts due to the intestate by a debtor domiciled in a foreign jurisdiction, and that the acquittance of the foreign domiciliary administrator is a complete protection to the debtor so paying.
In the case of Wilkins v. Ellett, 108 U.S. 256,2 Sup. Ct., 641, 27 L.Ed., 718, the facts were these: The intestate, Quarles, was a resident of Memphis in the State of Tennessee, where he was engaged in business with a firm which at the time of his death owed him about $3,500. A few days before he died Quarles visited a relative in Alabama, and while there died by accident, leaving some personal estate in Alabama. Within the month in which Quarles died an administrator of his estate was appointed in Alabama; and within a month thereafter the Alabama administrator went to Memphis, and there, upon exhibiting his letters of administration, collected from the firm with which Quarles was connected the amount that was due him. There were no Tennessee creditors of Quarles, and all of his kin lived either in Alabama or Virginia. In June following the death of Quarles in January, the plaintiff, Wilkins, took out letters of administration upon the estate of Quarles in Tennessee, and there brought suit against Ellett, surviving member of the firm which had paid the debt to the Alabama administrator, for its recovery, alleging that such payment was unauthorized and did not constitute an acquittance. The Supreme Court held that, assuming the correctness of the finding of the lower Court that Quarles was a resident of Tennessee:
"The Court erred in instructing the jury that, if the domicile was in Tennessee, they must find for the plaintiff, and in refusing to instruct them, as requested by the defendant, *Page 223 
that the payment to the Alabama administrator before the appointment of one in Tennessee, and there being no Tennessee creditors, was a valid discharge of the defendant, without reference to the domicile."
It is singular that in a previous decision of the same case (9 Wall., 740, 19 L.Ed., 586) it appeared that Quarles was a resident of Alabama, and the Court decided that:
"The payment in Tennessee to the Alabama administrator was good as against the administrator afterwards appointed in Tennessee."
So that it appears from this authority that it does not make any difference whether the intestate was domiciled in the state where administration was allowed or not. It is interesting to note that the decision is based upon the principle that the title to the personal property of the intestate, wherever located, is in the administrator wherever appointed, and that the inhibition against the foreign administrator's bringing suit in another jurisdiction is based upon the protection of the rights of citizens of the state where suit is brought.
"The objection does not rest upon any defect of the administrator's title in the property, but upon his personal incapacity to sue as administrator beyond the jurisdiction which appointed him."
The case is followed in Brown v. Ins. Co. (C.C.), 112 Fed., 846; Gardiner v. Thorndike, 183 Mass. 82,66 N.E., 634; Fox v. Tay, 89 Cal., 348, 24 Pac., 855, 26 Pac., 897, 23 Am. St. Rep., 479; Bull v. Fuller, 78 Iowa, 24,42 N.W., 573, 16 Am. St. Rep., 420; Luce v. Manchester R. Co.,63 N.H. 590, 3 Atl., 620; and In re Election, etc., 51 N. J. Law, 82, 16 Atl., 193.
In the case of Dial v. Gary, 14 S.C. 582, 37 Am. Rep., 737, the Court says, referring to the case of Doolittle v.Lewis, 7 Johns. Ch. (N.Y.), 46, 11 Am. Dec., 389:
"In this case it was said that a payment by a debtor to a foreign administrator would acquit the debtor. This, no *Page 224 
doubt, is good law where no administration has been taken out in the state of the debtor, and especially where the intestate has no creditor there."
In 24 C.J., 1120, it is said:
"But, since a foreign domiciliary representative has a title to assets wherever situated which may be recognized in the absence of local creditors or a local administration, he may under such circumstances take possession of property of the estate if he can do so peaceably and without suit, and his possession will be recognized as rightful and protected as fully as if he had taken out local letters of administration. He may also collect a debt due to the estate if voluntarily paid before the issuance of ancillary letters in the jurisdiction where the debt has its situs, and such payment is usually held to be a valid discharge of the debt and a protection against an action to collect the same debt by a domestic representative subsequently appointed" — citing a vast array of authorities in support of the proposition.
In 23 C.J., 1195, it is said:
"The general executor or administrator is bound to take due measures for the collection of foreign demands due the estate and other foreign assets, and is usually held to have authority to collect debts from foreign debtors, if voluntarily paid, and give good acquittances therefore."
The same principle is announced in Jones v. Jones, 39 S.C. 247,17 S.E., 587, 802, where Wilkins v. Ellett andDial v. Gary are cited with approval.
In Story, Conf. L., § 515, it is said:
"When a debt due a deceased person is voluntarily paid by the debtor at his own domicile in a state in which no administration is taken out, and in which no creditor and next of kin reside, to an administrator in another state, the sum paid is inventoried and accounted for by him in that state, the payment is good against an administrator afterwards appointed in the state in which the payment is made, although this is the state of the domicile of the deceased." *Page 225 
If, as a matter of fact, the intestate at the time of his death was domiciled in this state, and that fact does not appear upon the face of the record in the Georgia Court which granted the letters of administration, the plaintiff's remedy was to bring a direct action to vacate that proceeding. I express no opinion upon the virtue of that remedy. He certainly had no right to question the validity of that appointment in a collateral proceeding.
For all that appears to the contrary, the administrator may still have in his hands the assets received by him for which he would be accountable upon the establishment of the will. In any event the remedy of the plaintiff is against the administrator, as to the efficacy of which it would not be proper to express an opinion in this proceeding.
I think that the judgment of this Court should be that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the proceeding dismissed, without prejudice to any rights the plaintiff may have against the Georgia administrator.