Me. Justice B-latchfobd
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action at law, in ejectment, brought in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of South Carolina, in June, 1873, by Doctor William Bichardson Davie and others against James B.| Heyward, the younger, and others, to recover a plantation situated in Chester district, in South Carolina, on the Catawba River, and known as Lands-ford.
Both the plaintiffs and the defendants respectively claimed ■the property under the will of General William Bichardson Davie, the elder, made in September, 1819. The testator died in November, 1820. His will was duly executed to pass real estate, and was duly admitted to probate in the proper court. The plaintiffs were great-grandchildren of the testator, and were four in number. They were the children, and only heirs at law, of William Bichardson Davie, doctor of medicine, who was'the eldest male issue of Allen Jones Davie, who was a son of the testator.
The defendants were James B. Heyward, the younger, and
Sarah B., his wife; Mary Wysong and her husband, Dr. B. Wysong;. Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon, minor children of the late Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife, now the said Mary Wysong; Hyder D. Bedon; William Z. Bedon; Julia Izard and her. husband, Allen C. Izard; Jeannie B. Farrow and her husband, T. Stobo Farrow; A. Stobo Bedon; Bichard Bedon; and Bobin Carr Bedon, a minor.
Sarah B. Heyward, the wife of James B. Heyward, the younger, was called Sarah Bedon before she was married, and was the daughter of Julia A. Davie and her husband, Bichard S. Bedon; the said Julia A. being the only daughter of Hyder Alii David, who was a son of the testator.
Mary Wysong, the Wife of Dr. B. Wysong, was the widow of Josiah Bedon, who was a son of Bichard S. Bedon and his wife, the said Julia A. Davie. Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon were the children of the said Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife. Hyder D. Bedon, William Z. Bedon, Julia Izard, Jeannie B. Farrów, A. Stobo Bedon, Bichard Bedon and Bobin Carr Bedon were children of the said Bichard S. Bedon and Julia A., his wife. The defendant Josiah Bedon was a minor when this suit was brought, and during the entire time of its pendency, to a final judgment.
The clause- of the will of the testator under which the title was claimed by both parties is set forth in the margin.
Frederick William Davie, named in the will, died in April, 1850, leaving no issue surviving him. He left a last will and testament, duly executed, appointing as his executors Frederick G. Fraser and William Davie DeSaussure.
Hyder Alii Davie, named in the will, died in June, 1848, before the death of Frederick William Davie.' He left no male children, but only a daughter, the said Julia A., who, after the death of General William Richardson Davie, married the said Richard. S. Bedon.
Allen Jones Davie, named in the will, was the eldest son and the eldest child of the testator, and when the testator died had -three sons and a daughter, the eldest of which sons ■ was Dr. William Richardson Davie, father of the four plaintiffs.
Frederick William Davie, under the will, entered into possession of the plantation and held the s.ame during his lifetime. At his death, Dr. William Richardson Davie entered into the possession of it, and held it until he died, in January, 1854, intestate. In January, 1873, the defendant Heyward and his wife entered into possession of the plantation.
In July, 1873, on the petition of the defendant James B. Heyward for the appointment of a guardian
ad litem,
for the infant defendants Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon, as minor children of the late Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife, then Mary Wysong, the said infants residing in the State of Mary
land; an order was made by the Circuit Court appointing said Heyward their guardian
ad litem
in this cause, and authorizing and directing him to appear and defend' the action on their behalf. On August 1, 1873, Heyward, as their guardian
ad
litem, filed an answer for them, stating that, by reason of their tender years, they were wholly ignorant of the facts and statements set forth in the complaint, and, therefore, not able to admit or deny the same, but that they submitted their case to the discretion of the court and prayed its judgment for their costs and disbursements.
The defendants Heyward and wife, Dr. and Mrs. Wysong, Hyder D. Bedon, William Z. Bedon, Julia Izard and her husband, Jeannie B. Farrow and her husband, A. Stobo Bedon, and Richard Bedon, answered the complaint, in July, 1873, setting up, as a special defence, that Dr. William Richardson Davie, in his lifetime, while in possession of the plantation, executed to Frederick G-. Fraser, as executor of Frederick William Davie, deceased, a lease of the plantation; that after-wards, Dr. William. Richardson Davie and said Fraser both of them died, and William Davie DeSaussure became the sole executor of Frederick William Davie; that, as such executor, the said DeSaussure, being in possession of the plantation under said lease, was impleaded in the court of common pleas for Chester district, to answer to Lewis A. Beckham and William F. DeSaussure, survivors of themselves and Frederick William Davie, trustees under the will of Hyder Alii Davie, in an action of trespass for breaking and entering the premises in question; that said defendant pleaded not guilty, and the cause was tried before a jury at the fall term, 1855, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs; that the defendant appealed, and the case was heard upqn exceptions, in the Constitutional Court of Errors, the highest court of the State of South Carolina, at May term,' 1856; that the appeal and motion of the defendant for a new trial were dismissed, and a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs in that action, September 29, 1856, reciting a special verdict in the court of ■ common pleas, which found certain facts set forth therein, and concluded by stating that if, upon those facts, the court should
be of opinion that the plaintiffs were entitled to the land, then the jury found for the plaintiffs, with $5 damages, but if upon those facts the court should be of opinion that the plaintiffs had no- title to the land, then the jury found for the defendants ; and that the judgment of the court thereupon was, that the plaintiffs were entitled to the land in question, and that they recover them against the defendants, with $5 damages and costs. The answer set up that by said judgment of the court of common pleas, and by the adjudication of the questions in litigation therein between the parties, by the Constitutional Court of Errors of the State, the rights of the plaintiffs in the present suit were fully and finally determined and adjudged, and they were barred thereby of -all right of recovery against the defendants.
The plaintiffs filed a reply to that answer of Heyward and others, denying that the rights of the plaintiffs were determined and adjudged or in any way affected by the judgment in the case of
Beckham
v.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Me. Justice B-latchfobd
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action at law, in ejectment, brought in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of South Carolina, in June, 1873, by Doctor William Bichardson Davie and others against James B.| Heyward, the younger, and others, to recover a plantation situated in Chester district, in South Carolina, on the Catawba River, and known as Lands-ford.
Both the plaintiffs and the defendants respectively claimed ■the property under the will of General William Bichardson Davie, the elder, made in September, 1819. The testator died in November, 1820. His will was duly executed to pass real estate, and was duly admitted to probate in the proper court. The plaintiffs were great-grandchildren of the testator, and were four in number. They were the children, and only heirs at law, of William Bichardson Davie, doctor of medicine, who was'the eldest male issue of Allen Jones Davie, who was a son of the testator.
The defendants were James B. Heyward, the younger, and
Sarah B., his wife; Mary Wysong and her husband, Dr. B. Wysong;. Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon, minor children of the late Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife, now the said Mary Wysong; Hyder D. Bedon; William Z. Bedon; Julia Izard and her. husband, Allen C. Izard; Jeannie B. Farrow and her husband, T. Stobo Farrow; A. Stobo Bedon; Bichard Bedon; and Bobin Carr Bedon, a minor.
Sarah B. Heyward, the wife of James B. Heyward, the younger, was called Sarah Bedon before she was married, and was the daughter of Julia A. Davie and her husband, Bichard S. Bedon; the said Julia A. being the only daughter of Hyder Alii David, who was a son of the testator.
Mary Wysong, the Wife of Dr. B. Wysong, was the widow of Josiah Bedon, who was a son of Bichard S. Bedon and his wife, the said Julia A. Davie. Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon were the children of the said Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife. Hyder D. Bedon, William Z. Bedon, Julia Izard, Jeannie B. Farrów, A. Stobo Bedon, Bichard Bedon and Bobin Carr Bedon were children of the said Bichard S. Bedon and Julia A., his wife. The defendant Josiah Bedon was a minor when this suit was brought, and during the entire time of its pendency, to a final judgment.
The clause- of the will of the testator under which the title was claimed by both parties is set forth in the margin.
Frederick William Davie, named in the will, died in April, 1850, leaving no issue surviving him. He left a last will and testament, duly executed, appointing as his executors Frederick G. Fraser and William Davie DeSaussure.
Hyder Alii Davie, named in the will, died in June, 1848, before the death of Frederick William Davie.' He left no male children, but only a daughter, the said Julia A., who, after the death of General William Richardson Davie, married the said Richard. S. Bedon.
Allen Jones Davie, named in the will, was the eldest son and the eldest child of the testator, and when the testator died had -three sons and a daughter, the eldest of which sons ■ was Dr. William Richardson Davie, father of the four plaintiffs.
Frederick William Davie, under the will, entered into possession of the plantation and held the s.ame during his lifetime. At his death, Dr. William Richardson Davie entered into the possession of it, and held it until he died, in January, 1854, intestate. In January, 1873, the defendant Heyward and his wife entered into possession of the plantation.
In July, 1873, on the petition of the defendant James B. Heyward for the appointment of a guardian
ad litem,
for the infant defendants Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon, as minor children of the late Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife, then Mary Wysong, the said infants residing in the State of Mary
land; an order was made by the Circuit Court appointing said Heyward their guardian
ad litem
in this cause, and authorizing and directing him to appear and defend' the action on their behalf. On August 1, 1873, Heyward, as their guardian
ad
litem, filed an answer for them, stating that, by reason of their tender years, they were wholly ignorant of the facts and statements set forth in the complaint, and, therefore, not able to admit or deny the same, but that they submitted their case to the discretion of the court and prayed its judgment for their costs and disbursements.
The defendants Heyward and wife, Dr. and Mrs. Wysong, Hyder D. Bedon, William Z. Bedon, Julia Izard and her husband, Jeannie B. Farrow and her husband, A. Stobo Bedon, and Richard Bedon, answered the complaint, in July, 1873, setting up, as a special defence, that Dr. William Richardson Davie, in his lifetime, while in possession of the plantation, executed to Frederick G-. Fraser, as executor of Frederick William Davie, deceased, a lease of the plantation; that after-wards, Dr. William. Richardson Davie and said Fraser both of them died, and William Davie DeSaussure became the sole executor of Frederick William Davie; that, as such executor, the said DeSaussure, being in possession of the plantation under said lease, was impleaded in the court of common pleas for Chester district, to answer to Lewis A. Beckham and William F. DeSaussure, survivors of themselves and Frederick William Davie, trustees under the will of Hyder Alii Davie, in an action of trespass for breaking and entering the premises in question; that said defendant pleaded not guilty, and the cause was tried before a jury at the fall term, 1855, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs; that the defendant appealed, and the case was heard upqn exceptions, in the Constitutional Court of Errors, the highest court of the State of South Carolina, at May term,' 1856; that the appeal and motion of the defendant for a new trial were dismissed, and a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs in that action, September 29, 1856, reciting a special verdict in the court of ■ common pleas, which found certain facts set forth therein, and concluded by stating that if, upon those facts, the court should
be of opinion that the plaintiffs were entitled to the land, then the jury found for the plaintiffs, with $5 damages, but if upon those facts the court should be of opinion that the plaintiffs had no- title to the land, then the jury found for the defendants ; and that the judgment of the court thereupon was, that the plaintiffs were entitled to the land in question, and that they recover them against the defendants, with $5 damages and costs. The answer set up that by said judgment of the court of common pleas, and by the adjudication of the questions in litigation therein between the parties, by the Constitutional Court of Errors of the State, the rights of the plaintiffs in the present suit were fully and finally determined and adjudged, and they were barred thereby of -all right of recovery against the defendants.
The plaintiffs filed a reply to that answer of Heyward and others, denying that the rights of the plaintiffs were determined and adjudged or in any way affected by the judgment in the case of
Beckham
v. DeSaussure, and alleging that the proceedings and judgment were not had between the same parties as the parties to the present cause, and did not involve the same subject matter ; that the plaintiffs herein were not privies in blood or estate to any party or parties in that cause; and that the plaintiffs were not bound by the judgment therein. The reply also denied that the defendant in the case of
Beckham
v.
DeSaussure
was in possession of the premises in question, -at the time of the commencement of that suit, or at any other time. It alleged that, before the institution of proceedings in that cause, to wit, on June 28, 1850, a bill in equity was filed by said Fraser, as executor of Frederick 'William Davie, wherein Dr. William Bichardson- Davie, (the father of the plaintiffs,) Bichard S. Bedon and .Julia A. Bedon, his wife, (the father and mother of the defendants Hyder D. Bedon, William Z. Bedon, Julia Izard, Jeannie" B. Farrow, Sarah B. Heyward, Bichard Bedon and Bobin C. Bedon,) Josiah Bedon, (the father of the infant defendants Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon,) Hyder D. Bedon and William Z. Bedon, defendants in this suit, and the said Beckham and William F. DeSaussure, surviving trustees under the will of Hyder Alii
Davie, (and plaintiffs in the suit mentioned .in the answer of Heyward and others,) were impleaded as defendants, the subject'matter of which action was the title of Dr. William Richardson Davie (the plaintiffs’ father) to the said premises, under the will of General William Richardson Davie; that, the said cause having been heard, a decree of the court was duly entered, at Columbia, for the District of Richland, on March 19, 1851, whereby the title in fee of the said father of the plaintiffs in the land was confirmed and he was declared to be in rightful possession thereof; that that decree stands as the judgment of the court, unreversed and of force; and that the respective defendants in this cause, as parties, or privies to parties, in the cause of
Frederick G. Fraser, Executor
v.
Dr. William Richardson Davie
and the other defendants therein, were bound, concluded and determined by the decree therein, confirming the title of the' said father of the plaintiffs in this cause to the premises in question.
The present case was tried before a jury. It found, on August 8, 1873, a special verdict, which is set forth in full in the margin.
Upon that special verdict, the District Court
entered a judgment, on the 16th of August, 1873. That judgment recited service of process on the various defendants,
and among others on the infant defendants, Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon, rhinor children of the late Josiah Bedon and
Mary, his wife, then Mary Wysong, by publication and mailing through the post-office, and the appearance of said Alice'
Bedon. and Josiah Bedon, by James B. Heyward, their guardian
ad
litem, appointed by order of the court on July 28, 1873, and the service of their answer, and the service of the other answer and of the reply. The judgment also set forth at length the special verdict, and stated that the questions of law reserved for argument had been argued, and that it was adjudged that the plaintiffs recover of the defendants (including Alice Bedon and Josiah Bedon, minor children of' Josiah Bedon and Mary, his wife, then Mary Wysong) the possession of the real property mentioned in the complaint, and the sum of five dollars for the withholding thereof, and the costs of the action.
The infant defendant Josiah Bedon, having become of age on December 21, 1885, sued out a writ of error from this court, on December 9, 1887, to review the said judgment. The writ was allowed by Judge Simonton, under § 1008 of the Bevised Statutes, having been brought within two years after the judgment was entered, exclusive of the term of the disability of Josiah Bedon as an infant. 33 Fed. Bep. 93.
We are of opinion that the judgment must be affirmed, on the ground that the question raised by the plaintiff in error was adjudicated conclusively, so far as he is concerned, by the decree in the suit in equity of
Fraser
v.
Davie.
To that suit Josiah Bedon, the father of the plaintiff in error, and Mrs. Julia A. Bedon, the grandmother of the plaintiff in error, and her husband, Richard S. Bedon, were made defendants. The only title set up by the plaintiff in error is one alleged to be derived through his father and his grandmother. The decree in the suit of
Fraser
v. Davie, is found by the special verdict in this case to have been entered March 19, 1851, and to have been a decree dismissing the bill. The bill was taken
pro confesso
against all the defendants. Notice of an appeal from that decree was given, but the appeal was not prosecuted and was finally abandoned, and the decree remains unreversed.
The reply in this suit states that a decree in the case of
Fraser
v.
Davie
was duly entered on March 19, 1851, whereby the title in fee of Dr. William Bichardson Davie, the father of the plaintiffs herein, in the premises in question, was con
firmed, and he was declared to he in rightful possession of said premises. The special verdict finds that the bill in the suit of
Fraser
v.
Davie
claimed that the title' to the land was not in Dr. William Eichardson Davie, but was either in the heir general of Hyder Alii Davie, (namely, Mrs. Julia A. Bedon,) or in the grandsons of Hyder Alii Davie, the sons of Mrs. Julia A. Bedon, and that the said bill was taken
pro eonfesso
against all the defendants, including Dr. William Eichardson Davie, Eichard S. Bedon and his wife, Julia A. Bedon, and their sons, Josiah Bedon, Hyder D. Bedon, and William Z. Bedon, and Lewis A. Beckham, and William F. DeSaussure, trustees under the will of Hyder Alii Davie.
It is-claimed by the plaintiff-in error, that the court below erred in not finding that the plaintiffs in this suit were concluded by the case of
Beckham
v.
DeSaussure;
and in not finding that Hyder Alii Davie took an estate in fee in the plantation; and in finding that Josiah Bedon, Hyder D. Bedon and William Z. Bedon were, not issue male of Hyder Alii Davie living at his death, through their mother, .Julia A. Bedon; and in not finding that Josiah Bedon, senior, the father of the plaintiff in error, died leaving issue male in the person of the plaintiff in error, and that the title to the plantation became vested in the father absolutely, in fee, on the birth of the plaintiff in error ; and in finding that, as to the plaintiff in error, the decree in
Fraser
v.
Davie
determined the right of the possession of the plantation, and was
res
adjv.;
dAcata.
The bill of complaint in
Fraser
v.
Davie
alleged that, by the .will of the testator, the plantation, on the death of Frederick William Davie without male issue, passed to the heirs of Hyder Alii Davie, he having left, as male issue, the sons of his daughter, Julia A. Bedon, who were alive at the time of his death. The prayer of that bill was for the rescission of the lease from Dr. William Eichardson Davie to Fraser, on the grounds set forth in the bill.
-It is objected by the plaintiff in error, that the bill in
Fraser
v.
Davie
was filed in Eichland district while the plantation was in Chester district. We perceive no force in that objection.
The case of
Fraser
v.
Davie
is reported in 9 Rich. Law, 568, note, and that of
Beckham
v.
DeSaussure,
in 9 Rich. Law, 531.
The decree of March 19,1851, in the suit of
Fraser
v.
Davie,
was prior to the judgment of September 29, 1856, in the suit of Beckham and DeSaussure, as trustees against DeSaussure, executor of Frederick William Davie, and as the plaintiffs in .the present suit, the heirs at law of Dr. William Richardson Davie, were not parties to the suit of Beckham against DeSaussure, th$_ judgment in that suit was of no force or effect in favor of the plaintiff in error, as against the decree in the suit of
Fraser
v.
Davie.
The plaintiff in error, therefore, has no case, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice 'Gray was not present at the argument and took no part in the decision of this case.