Belue v. Fetner

164 S.E.2d 753, 251 S.C. 600, 1968 S.C. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 4, 1968
Docket18847
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 164 S.E.2d 753 (Belue v. Fetner) 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
Belue v. Fetner, 164 S.E.2d 753, 251 S.C. 600, 1968 S.C. LEXIS 209 (S.C. 1968).

Opinion

Moss, Chief Justice.

This is an action for partition of real estate by sale. The real property, which is the subject of this action, is referred ■to in Item 4 of the will of H. H. Belue, as follows:

“All my land lying West of my home tract, containing about forty acres, and which I hereby designate as Tract No. 4, I give, devise and bequeath unto my nephews, Athens Belue, Sr., Omega Belue, and Ola Belue, for and durng the term of their natural lives, not subject however to any debts, and at and after their deaths, to their children respectively, and their heirs and assigns forever; the child or children of any deceased child to take the share to which its parents would have been entitled, if living. This is given to my said nephews for life, share and share alike.

H. H. Belue,who died in 1910, left his will dated May 17, 1906, which has been duly proven and probated in the office of the Probate Court for Union County, South Carolina.

The real property, with which we are here concerned, is referred to in the aforesaid will as containing about forty acres; however, a plat of said property was prepared by •H. L. Kennedy, a surveyor, in December, 1910, and said plat reveals that Tract No. 4 contains 72.9 acres, rather than about 40 acres. This plat purports to show a division of the said 72.9 acres into Tract No. 7 containing 49 acres and Tract No. 8 containing 23.9 acres. The record does not show that the 72.9 acre tract has been subdivided by or among the remaindermen.

Athens Belue, Sr., Omega Belue and Ola Belue, the life tenants named in Item 4 of the will of H. H. Belue, survived him.

Athens Belue, Sr., died in 1927 never having been married and leaving no children. Ola Belue died December 21, 1961, leaving one living child, J. Fincher Belue, the plaintiff *604 herein, and one living grandson, Noel Belue, being the only child of a predeceased son of said Ola Belue. Omega Belue died on September 13, 1963, leaving two children, Sidney Belue and Iva Belue Fetner. Athens Belue, Sr. and Omega Belue never made any conveyance of their life interests in the subject premises. Upon the death of Athens Belue, Sr. in 1927, Omega Belue and Ola Belue each had an undivided one-half life estate interest in said real property.

The record shows that on November 19, 1915, Ola Belue conveyed unto Florence Belue his life estate interest in and to a portion of the said 72.9 acre tract, namely, 48 acres. Thereafter, Florence Belue mortgaged her interest in said premises, which said mortgage was foreclosed in the year 1928, and the life estate interest of Ola Belue was conveyed by the Master of Union County unto Mrs. Ida L. Belue. Thereafter, Mrs. Ida L. Belue mortgaged the life estate interest of Ola Belue, which said mortgage was foreclosed, and said interest was sold and conveyed by the Master of Union County, in the year 1932, unto W. H. Poole, and he, on November 4, 1933, conveyed all of his right, title and interest in the subject premises unto Mrs. O. B. Belue. Mrs. O. B. Belue died intestate on November 18, 1964, leaving as her sole heirs at law and distributees Lucille Belue Burgess and Lunette Belue Greene, and they, on July 13, 1965, conveyed to Jack D. Greene “all of their right, title and interest in and to” the said 48 acre tract of land with which we are here concerned.

This action was commenced by J. Fincher Belue, one of the remaindermen, for partition by sale of the subject premises. It is alleged in the complaint that the last of the life tenants mentioned in Item 4 of the will of H. H. Belue died on September 13, 1963, thereby terminating the life estates created in the will and that fee simple title to the real property is now vested in J. Fincher Belue, Iva Belue Fetner, Sidney Belue and Noel Belue as tenants in common, each owning a one-fourth undivided interest. It was further *605 alleged that Jack D. Greene has no interest in said premises. The defendant, Jack D. Greene answered, alleging that he was owner by deed and adverse possession to the 48 acre tract of land.

The case came on to be heard by The Honorable James W. Workman, Judge of the Union County Court, and by his decree dated May 3, 1968, he held that J. Fincher Belue, Iva Belue Fetner, Sidney Belue, Noel Belue and Jack D. Greene each had an undivided one-fifth interest in said premises and decreed a partition by sale of the property and a division of the net proceeds of said sale among the aforesaid parties equally. It is from this decree that this appeal is prosecuted.

The question for determination is whether Jack D. Greene is the owner of a one-fifth undivided interest in the 48 acre tract of land with which we are here concerned. In this connection there is some argument made by Jack D. Greene that he is the sole owner of the tract of land here involved. However, this question is not properly before us because the lower court held that Jack D. Greene was the owner of only a one-fifth undivided interest in the 48 acre tract of land and he has not appealed from such finding.

The following is taken from the agreed statement .of the case found in the transcript of the record:

“Ola Belue and Omega Belue each possessed an undivided one-half life estate interest in said real property; the said Athens Belue died in 1927 without child or children and was never married; Omega Belue made no conveyances or transfers of his undivided one-half life estate interest.

“Ola Belue in the year 1915 made a conveyance unto Florence Belue of his one-half life estate interest in and to a portion of the 72.9 acre tract, namely 48 acres, said deed having been recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Union County in Deed Book ‘47’, Page 390.”

*606 The parties having agreed that Ola Belue and Omega Belue each possessed an undivided one-half life estate interest in the real property are bound thereby. When counsel enter into an agreed stipulation of fact as a basis for decision by the court, both sides will be bound by such agreed stipulation, and the court will not g-o beyond such stipulation to determine the facts upon which the case is to be decided. Forbes v. Kingan & Co., 174 S. C. 24, 176 S. E. 880. United Fabrics Corp. v. Delaney, 241 S. C. 268, 128 S. E. (2d) 111.

It being agreed that Ola Belue had only an undivided life estate interest in the real property here involved, he could convey no more than his life estate. It was so held in the case of Hutto v. Ray, 192 S. C. 364, 6 S. E. (2d) 747. The mortgage excuted by Florence Belue necessarily covered only the life estate interest which she aquired under the deed from Ola Belue for that was all that she had; and the Master’s deed in the foreclosure could convey no more. Bethea v. Bass, 240 S. C. 398, 126 S. E. (2d) 354. The mortgage given by Florence Belue could hot bind any interest of the remaindermen. McDonald v. Woodward, 58 S. C. 554, 36 S. E. 918.

When Omega Belue, the last of the life tenants, died on September 13, 1963, the life estates granted in the will were terminated and the title to the property vested in the remaindermen mentioned in the said will. The life estate interest of Ola Belue, which Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.E.2d 753, 251 S.C. 600, 1968 S.C. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belue-v-fetner-sc-1968.