Bank of Prosperity v. Dominick

107 S.E. 914, 116 S.C. 228, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1921
Docket10651
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 107 S.E. 914 (Bank of Prosperity v. Dominick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Prosperity v. Dominick, 107 S.E. 914, 116 S.C. 228, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 83 (S.C. 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This action was brought originally against Louisa Domnick for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage given by her to the plaintiff bank. Other defendants were joined as holders of mortgages upon the same land. The cause proceeded to judgment of foreclosure and sale. At the sale the premises were bid off by Ada Dominick, whose relationship to the main defendant does not appear in the record, nor is it material. The purchaser refused to comply, upon the ground that by the deeds under which the mortgagor, Louisa Dominick, claimed, she had only a life estate, the remainder in fee being vested in her children. A rule was issued, requiring the purchaser, Ada Dominick, to show cause why she should not be required to comply with the bid. Upon return to that rule, Hon. T. G. McLeod, Special Judge, signed a decree, holding that under the deeds in question Louisa Dominick held a fee conditional and that as there were living children at the time of her death, her mortgage was valid and the sale under foreclosure would carry the fee to the purchaser. He accordingly dismissed the return of Ada Dominick and required her to comply with her bid. From' this decree there was an appeal to this Court. This Court (106 S. C., 120, 90 S. E., 264) reversed the Circuit decree upon the ground that a decision of the main point in the appeal *231 would necessarily affect the interest of the children of Louisa Dominick, and that as they had not been made parties to the action or to the rule, the case should be remanded to the Circuit Court that said children be made parties and be allowed to set up such claim to the land as they might be advised and have the same adjudicated. The Court specifically and expressly refrained from intimating any opinion as to the merits of the controversy.

Thereafter the plaintiff served an amended complaint, making the bodily issue of Henry P. Dominick and Louisa Dominick parties, and alleging such facts as raised the issue of the validity of the title offered to the purchaser. To this complaint all of the defendants filed answers except the mortgagor, Louisa Dominick, the purchaser, Ada Dominick, and the heirs of Henry P. Dominick and Louisa Dominick making the contention that the interest of Louisa Dominick in the premises was only a life estate, the remainder in fee vesting' in them upon the death of the life tenant, or, more accurately speaking, vesting in them at the time of the execution of the deeds, the possession being postponed until the efflux of the life estate.

The case was heard by Hon. Frank B. Gary, Circuit Judge, upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts, which will be reported. On June 16, 1920, the Circuit Judge filed a decree, determining that Louisa Dominick had only a life estate in the premises, “with remainder after death of Mr. and Mrs. Dominick to the ‘body issue’ of Mr. and Mrs. Dominick as purchasers.” We assume he meant to lodge the fee simple in remainder in the bodily heirs. He further ordered that the interested defendants have leave to apply for such further orders as would carry the decree into effect. The effect of this decree was to discharge the rule against Ada Dominick, the purchaser, and to render void the sale by the Master under the foreclosure decree. It, however, suspended in the air what *232 ever rights the several'mortgagees had against the interest of Louisa Dominick. It appears that she is still living, and if it should be determined that she has only a life estate in the land, the mortgagees are entitled to have that interest sold and applied to their debts.

There, is another matter that has escaped the attention of the Circuit Judge: The plaintiff’s mortgage covered two separate tracts, one of 40 acres and the other of 19 ■acres. The 40-acre tract is a part of a tract of 224 acres which had previously been conveyed to H. P. Dominick and Louisa Dominick by P. H. Dominick, and at the time of the conveyance from H. P. Dominick to Louisa Dominick, dated March 18, 1889, of the 224-acre tract, this tract was owned by H. P. Dominick and Louisa Dominick as joint tenants, Louisa Dominick being the owner of an undivided half interest in the same, and the conveyance referred to of H. P. Dominick to Louisa Dominick conveyed to her only his undivided half interest in the same. If, therefore, she owned in her own right an individual half interest iii the land, and the 40-acre tract was a part of the 224-acre tract, her mortgage of the 40-acre tract was a lien upon such undivided interest, independently of. a construction of the deed from H. P. Dominick to her, which would affect only the interest' which he owned. The mortgagees in any event are entitled to a sale of Louisa Dominick’s half interest.

It does not appear that Louisa Dominick had any interest in the 19-acre tract other than what was conveyed to her by the deed of H. P. Dominick, of the same date as the other deed, March 18, 1889. The question for determination is therefore what interest, if any, did the children (heirs of the body) of Louisa Dominick take in the half interest in the 40-acre tract conveyed by IT. P. Dominick to Louisa Dominick, and in the 19-acre tract similarly conveyed? Did these deeds convey fee simple or *233 fee conditional estates to Louisa Dominick, or life estates to her, with remainders to her children? The two deeds contain exactly the same provisions in the habendum clauses:

“Unto the said Louisa Dominick, during her natural life, and at her 'death to be equally divided between the body issue of Henry and Louisa Dominick, and in case of her death before mine, I am to enjoy all the uses and privileges of said lands herein conveyed until my death, and then to be equally divided as above provided for and her heirs and assigns forever.”

ft is evident from the terms Of the deed that the grant- or’s intentions were to convey a life estate to his wife, Louisa Dominick, reserving to himself a similar estate in the event that she predeceased him, and at her or his death, as the case might be, to divide the property equally between the “body issue,” that is, the children, or their representatives in title, of the grantor and his wife. If this intention can be carried out, without violating the settled principles applicable to the construction of deeds, it will be done, otherwise not. Smith v. Clinkscales, 102 S. C., 227; 85 S. E., 1064.

The Circuit Judge held that the concluding words of the limitation, “and her heirs and assigns forever,” by changing the word' “her” to “their,” should read, “apd their heirs and assigns forever,” which being made applicable to “body issue,” meaning children, would vest in such.children the fee, postponed in enjoyment to the life estate in Louisa Dominick and a possible life estate in H. P. Dominick upon his survival of Louisa. Under the cases of Sease v. Sease, 64 S. C., 216; 41 S. E. 898, and Keith v. Perry, 1 Desaus. 353, this is entirely permissible, when it is necessary to carry out the evident intention of the grantor, as in this case.

A different construction of the deed, however, which we prefer, makes it unnecessary to resort to this change of *234 words.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.E. 914, 116 S.C. 228, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-prosperity-v-dominick-sc-1921.