Bell v. Edwards

59 S.E. 535, 78 S.C. 490, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 28, 1907
Docket6710
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 S.E. 535 (Bell v. Edwards) 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
Bell v. Edwards, 59 S.E. 535, 78 S.C. 490, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 259 (S.C. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

The plaintiff seeks in this action to have a trust declared for the heirs of Elizabeth Bell, deceased, in the tract of land described in the complaint. On December 3, 1877, J. E. G. Bell, father of plaintiff and of defendants, J. H. Bell, Rosa Gregory, W. E. Bell, Georgia Baskin 'and Janie Edwards, being indebted to' sundry parties, among whom were his wife, Elizabeth Bell, and the firm of Wardlaw & Edwards, who were judgment creditors; the tract of land in question was sold on that day by the sheriff of Abbeville County to Mrs. Elizabeth Bell for the sum of sixteen hundred dollars. Subsequently Mrs. Bell assigned her bid to> John G. Edwards, member of the firm of Wardlaw & Edwards, and husband of defendant Janie Edwards. The sheriff made deed of said tract of land to John G. Edwards, on February 21, 1878, who went infi> possession and com tinued in possession until his death in August, 1904.

*493 Defendants J. H. Bell, Rosa Gregory, W. E. Bell and Georgia Baskin filed no answer. The other defendants answered, setting up various alleged defenses. The Circuit Court (Judge Dantzler) tried the case on testimony taken by the master, and held that neither an express trust nor a resulting trust had been established, and dismissed the complaint.

Plaintiff appeals upon numerous exceptions.

Without considering the exceptions seriatim, we will notice the controlling questions raised by the appeal.

1st. Properly construed, what is the nature of the trust alleged in the complaint ? The allegations of the complaint pertinent to this inquiry are:

1 “That at the time said land was sold by said sheriff, the said Elizabeth Bell furnished to the said John G. Edwards the sum of nine hundred and five and 77-100 dollars to pay for the said land by allowing him to' use the amount going to her on her execution under said sale in paying for said land, the- said tract of land being paid for by the execution held by her, being credited with that amount, and execution of Wardlaw & Edwards being applied to said purchase money, the said execution was used by said John G. Edwards in part payment of said tract of land, and thereby a resulting trust was established in said land in favor of the said Elizabeth Bell to the extent of about two-thirds of its value.
“That said purchase money was paid'by the said Elizabeth Bell in pursuance of agreement between her and the said John G. Edwards, that the said John G. Edwards should take a deed to the said tract of land and hold the same in his own name till certain moneys which he claimed he had advanced to the said J. E. Bell, the husband of Mrs. Bell, should be paid, and then that the said land should be conveyed to the said Elizabeth Bell.”

We think the complaint alleges an express trust, as was held by the Circuit Court. It is alleged in paragraph two, above quoted, that there was a resulting trust in said land *494 in favor of the said Elizabeth Bell to- the extent of about two-thirds of its value, but this is a mere conclusion of law and is followed by allegations in the third paragraph of an agreement that all the land should be reconveyed to Mrs. Bell upon condition. This negatives the idea of a resulting trust, because it shows an agreement different from that Which the law would imply from the mere payment of a part of the purchase money.

“A resulting trust arises in favor of one who- pays the purchase money of an estate and takes title in the name of another, because of the presumption that he who- pays for a thing intends -a beneficial interest therein- for himself; but this presumption cannot arise when a contrary intent appears, since it is based on the absence of evidence of such contrary intent.” Manning v. Screvens, 56 S. C., 83, 34 S. E., 22.

2 It is well settled that an express trust cannot be established by parol evidence (Rogers v. Rogers, 52 S. C., 393, 29 S. E., 812; Pruitt v. Pruitt, 57 S. C., 163, 35 S. E., 485), and w-e concur with the Circuit Court in the finding that there is not sufficient evidence of an express trust. The only writings in evidence urged as- testimony supporting such trust are: 1st. The following entry made by the auditor of Abbeville County upon his duplicate books in February, 1903, in respect to the- land in question, at the request of John C. Edwards: “Sold Mrs. E- Bell.” This was a mere direction for the guidance of the auditor, is not an admission of a previous existing trust and was not “signed by the party,” as -expressly required by the -statute.

The next writing relied on is that contained in- the correspondence between John G. Edwards and J. J. Johnson- during the month of October, 1903. It seems that Edwards contemplated a sale of the land and a division of the proceeds among the children of Mrs. Elizabeth Bell, and that a number of these children had met at his house- and agreed that the land should bring five thousand dollars. Accordingly the land was offered for sale at auction- at Abbeville, *495 on October 4, 1903, and having been knocked down to defendant James H. Bell at $3,375, there was dissatisfaction with the sale at such price, a controversy arose, and this correspondence ensued. In his letter of October 6, 1903, Johnson, on behalf of J. H. Bell, offered to sell Edwards his (J. H. Bell’s) part for $1,000, to which Edwards next day replied: “Please say to Mr. Bell that we cannot accept his proposition, but would entertain a proposition on a basis of $5,000, all the heirs agreeing.” This proposition was accepted by J. H. Bell through Johnson, but later the acceptance was withdrawn. Then Edwards wrote Johnson to the effect that he (Edwards) owned the land in fee, free from any claims whatever; that his offer of an interest in the proceeds of sale to the children of Mrs. Elizabeth Bell was purely voluntary, and that since they were disposed' to seek litigation he stood strictly on his legal rights, as he had bought and paid for the land with his own money.

It is contended by appellant that the words “all the heirs agreeing,” quoted above, constituted an admission in writing of an existing trust in favor of the Bell heirs. It is well settled that the writing, as evidence of a trust or acknowledgment thereof, must manifest a previous trust; Barrett v. Cochran 11 S. C., 29; Kennedy v. Gramling, 33 S. C., 367, 11 S. E., 1081; and such is the language of the statute. Hence, mere vague and ambiguous words, capable of an inference which negatives a trust, cannot be regarded as a compliance with the statute.

In Barrett v. Cochran, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 535, 78 S.C. 490, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-edwards-sc-1907.