Breeden v. Moore

64 S.E. 604, 82 S.C. 534, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 10, 1909
Docket7189
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 64 S.E. 604 (Breeden v. Moore) 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
Breeden v. Moore, 64 S.E. 604, 82 S.C. 534, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 86 (S.C. 1909).

Opinions

May 10, 1909. The opinion of the Court was delivered by *Page 536 Thomas Stubbs, Sr., of Marlboro county, died on the 18th June, 1847, leaving a will, by the fifth clause of which he made this devise: "I give and devise to my friend Holden W. Liles, one hundred acres of land whereon my son, Thomas Stubbs, Jr., now lives, composed partly of the Bowyer tract and partly of the Terrell tract,in trust nevertheless, to permit my said son, Thomas Stubbs, Jr., to use and enjoy the same to his sole and separate use, without rendering an account of the rents and profits, during the term of his natural life, and after his death to convey the same to the children of the said Thomas Stubbs, Jr., lawfully begotten that may be living at the time of his death, to them and their heirs forever, and should he die leaving no heirs lawfully begotten, surviving him, I give the said tract of land to the said Holden W. Liles in trust to permit my daughter Lucy Ann Goodwin to use, occupy and enjoy the same during her natural life and after her death to convey the same to the heirs of her body, to them and their heirs forever, should she die leaving no such heirs then the said trustee to divide the same equally among my surviving children, the issue of any deceased child, taking the share of any of my children who may then be dead." Thomas Stubbs, Jr., held possession of the land as devisee until 1856, when he died without having had issue of his body. Immediately after his death, Lucy Ann Goodwin went into possession and held until 1881, when she made a deed of conveyance to Milton A.J. Moore and his wife, Alice Moore. This deed purported to convey nothing more than the interest of the grantor, the words used being, "all my interest and estate in and to" the premises described, and it contained no warranty clause. Mrs. Goodwin, the life tenant, died in June, 1898, without ever having any issue of her body. Soon after her death the plaintiffs, claiming as heirs of children of Thomas Stubbs, Sr., who survived him, brought this action, alleging that the life estate having fallen in they were entitled, as remaindermen, to a partition *Page 537 of the land. M.A.J. Moore and his wife, Alice Moore, having been made parties to the suit, by their answer set up these defenses: First, that the deed from Lucy Ann Goodwin conveyed to them a good fee simple estate; andsecond, that they had held the land adversely to the plaintiffs and all other persons since their entry under the deed in 1881; and third, that they had acquired by deeds of conveyance whatever interest in the land existed in favor of certain of the persons named in the complaint, as holding an interest in common with the plaintiffs and by the same right. During the pendency of the action, M.A.J. Moore died, and his executors and executrix, and his devisees and legatees were substituted for him as defendants.

From the date of the deed in 1881, M.A.J. Moore and his wife and his devisees have been in possession of the land. The original trustee, Holden J. Liles, died about the year 1881, and his eldest son, James E. Liles, became his successor by operation of law: Reynolds v. Reynolds, 61 S.C. 250,39 S.E., 391; Cone v. Cone, 61 S.C. 522,39 S.E., 784; and, as trustee, was made a party to the suit. He testified, however, that he never heard of the trust until this action was commenced, and of course, had nothing to do with the land.

The Circuit Judge held the limitation over after the death of Lucy Ann Goodwin to be too remote, and that she, therefore, took a fee simple title which passed by her conveyance to M.A.J. Moore and Alice Moore. This conclusion would be correct but for the fact that the limitation over is to the testator's "surviving children." Such a limitation was held not too remote in Selman v. Robertson, 46 S.C. 262,24 S.E., 187; where the subject is fully discussed and the authorities cited.

The Circuit Court held further, that the grantees of Mrs. Goodwin had acquired title by adverse possession. We think this conclusion also was erroneous, for two reasons,first, the grantees of Mrs. Goodwin could not hold adversely *Page 538 against the remaindermen or the trustee for them, until the termination of the life estate of Mrs. Goodwin; and,second, there was not a scintilla of evidence of adverse possession. To support the plea of adverse possession, it is necessary to show that the claimant against whom it is asserted was not prevented by law from asserting his right during the period of the possession, alleged to be adverse. In the effort to meet this requirement, the respondents maintain that assuming the remainder over to be valid, yet the legal title was in the trustee during the life of Mrs. Goodwin, that she had no right to convey and that when they took a deed from her and entered under it, their adverse possession began. The question then is, whether, the trustee or Mrs. Goodwin held the legal title to the life estate, for it will not be doubted if Mrs. Goodwin held the legal estate for life, no act of hers could defeat the remaindermen, and no possession during her life could be adverse to the trustee or remaindermen. In Howard v. Henderson, 18 S.C. 184,192, the conveyance was to a trustee "for the use, benefit, and behoof of the said William S. Howard, Sr., during the term of his natural life, with remainder at his death to the said Georgia V. Howard, during the term of her natural life, and upon her death to such child or children of the said William S. Howard, Jr., and the said Georgia V. Howard, as may be living." It was held that the statute executed the use as to the life estate, the Court saying: "So that whatever may be the proper construction of this deed in reference to the application of the statute of uses on the estates of Mrs. Howard and the children in remainder, there is no reason why it should not execute the estate of W.S. Howard, Sr., the plaintiff, vesting in him a legal estate for life, the fee possibly remaining in the trustee for the benefit of the married woman, and for the preservation of the contingent remainders to the children." The same principle was applied conversely in Williman v. Holmes, 4 Rich. Eq., 475 and Wieters v. Timmons, 25 S.C. 488. 1 S.E., 1. In *Page 539 these cases it was held the trustee retained the legal title as to the life estate, while as to the remainder the statute executed the use, and vested the legal title in the remaindermen freed from the trust. These adjudications rest on the rule of universal application that a trustee will not be held to take any larger estate than is necessary to enable him to perform the duty imposed by the instrument creating the trust. This principle and the authority of the cases above cited are recognized and restated in Ayer v. Ritter, 29 S.C. 137,7 S.E., 53; Young v. McNeill, 78 S.C. 150,59 S.E., 986, and Moseley v. Hankinson, 25 S.C. 519.

There is difficulty, it is true, in reconciling the case ofBristow v. McCall, 16 S.C. 345, which preceded Howard v. Henderson, supra

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.E. 604, 82 S.C. 534, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breeden-v-moore-sc-1909.