Brock v. Kirkpatrick

48 S.E. 72, 69 S.C. 231, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 31, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 S.E. 72 (Brock v. Kirkpatrick) 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
Brock v. Kirkpatrick, 48 S.E. 72, 69 S.C. 231, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 89 (S.C. 1904).

Opinions

May 31, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The judgment of the Circuit Court should be affirmed.

1. The appeal is premature. The action is purely equitable, to subject lands devised to the debts of the testatrix against devisees in possession under the will, and it has been referred to the master to hear and determine all equitable issues. There has been no order, judgment or decree in the case from which an appeal can be taken under sec. 11 of the Code of Procedure. True, there is a verdict of a jury on certain matters submitted to them, but no order or judgment has been predicated thereon, and it has been frequently held that an appeal will not lie from a verdict. All v. Hiers, 59 S.C. 558, 38 S.E., 157; Hutmacher v. Railway, 63 S.C. 124, 40 S.E., 1029.

2. The answer does not raise any legal issue of title by adverse possession which is triable by jury as matter of right. Confusion has arisen by a failure to observe the real nature of the action and the defense. The action is equitable, and is necessarily predicated on the fact that both title and possession are in the devisees under the will. It is based upon the creditor's equity to subject the devised lands to the debts of the devisor. The answer properly construed sets up no title inconsistent with plaintiff's equity. In order to make this clear we quote the answer as follows: "That by her last will and testament mentioned in paragraph IV. of the complaint, the said Jane Taylor devised to the defendant, Hannah Kirkpatrick, two hundred acres of land and to the defendant, Annie *Page 234 Taylor, two hundred and sixty acres of land, the two parcels being that tract of land described in the complaint, and these defendants are now the sole owners and possessors thereof in fee simple. That immediately after the death of the said Jane Taylor, to wit: on the 16th day of December, 1888, each of said defendants under and by virtue of saiddevise entered into the sole and exclusive possession of her respective tract of said land, and each of them has remained in the exclusive and adverse use and occupation of her tract of said land, exercising acts of sole ownership and receiving the rents, issues and profits of the same continuously for a period of more than ten years next preceding the commencement of this action. These defendants interpose their continuous adverse possession of said lands as a bar to this action."

By the first part of the answer, defendants claim to be the owners in fee simple under the will of Jane Taylor, and by the second part of the answer defendants assert that theyentered into sole and exclusive possession of said land underand by virtue of said devise, and have remained in exclusive and adverse use, c., for ten years preceding the action, which possession is interposed as a bar to this action. Thus it will be seen that the answer sets up no title paramount to plaintiff's equity.

The rule is thus stated in Sale v. Meggett, 25 S.C. 77: "Where a title is set up, which if proved to exist as alleged would be superior to the plaintiff's title, then in such case, the existence of such title is a matter for the jury, under the instruction of the Judge as to the law involved. But where, even admitting the title claimed by the defendant as alleged, yet if it is inferior to that of plaintiff and as a matter of law would not defeat his claim, if sustained by the verdict of the jury, then there is no necessity for the Judge trying an equity cause to submit the title to a jury, for the reason that, in fact, the title is not really involved, as the defendant can claim nothing under it; and, therefore, it would be wholly useless to encumber the proceeding with a separate trial in *Page 235 reference thereto. The Judge himself may adjudicate the rights of the parties." In Bank v. Peterkin, 52 S.C. 236,29 S.E., 546, which was an equitable action to foreclose a real estate mortgage, a defendant was allowed to have an issue of title submitted to a jury because the answer raised an issue of paramount title in himself, which would defeat plaintiff's recovery as to him. In order to raise an issue of title in defendants triable by jury, as matter of right, so as to defeat plaintiffs' action, it would be necessary to set up title paramount to the title of testatrix.

It is true, that plaintiffs' recovery in this case could be defeated by showing exclusive possession of the devised lands for ten years after the right of action accrued in favor of plaintiff. But such a defense raises no issue of title triable by jury as matter of right. Such defense is really equitable. It is founded not upon defendants' title or possession, which is undisputed, but upon the delay or laches of plaintiffs in enforcing their equity. In such cases the court of equity might or should hold the remedy barred in analogy to the statute of limitations with reference to actions to recover possession of real estate. Miller v. Mitchell, Bailey Eq., *437. If this is the correct view of the issue as raised by the pleadings, then manifestly it would be wrong to remand the case to the Circuit Court for a new trial before a jury on the question of title made by the pleadings.

3. On the call of the case, June 27, 1901, on motion of defendants' attorneys, Judge Klugh made an order in these terms: "The defendants having set up in their answer that they are, and have been since December, 1888, in the continued and adverse possession of the land in dispute, and having asked for a trial by jury on this issue; after argument of counsel, pro and con, it is ordered, that the case be transferred to calendar (1) one, for the purpose of trying said issue by jury." The cause was called on calendar 1, at the term, 1901, before Judge Townsend, and a question arose as to the proper way to submit the question to the jury. After argument, Judge Townsend drew up the following *Page 236 issues for the jury: "1. Has the defendant, Annie Taylor, acquired title to the 260 acre tract by adverse possession? (2) Has the defendant, Hannah Kirkpatrick, acquired title to the 200 acre tract by adverse possession?"

The jury found both questions in the negative, and it is now sought to set aside these findings of fact mainly because of alleged misdirection to the jury. The charge and refusals to charge are sufficiently set out in the opinion by acting Associate Justice Ernest Gary, and need not be further particularized. The main point is substantially involved in the third exception, which alleges error "in charging the jury that the ten years necessary to give defendants title by adverse possession must commence to run from the time the executor was exhausted, and that the jury must commence to count from that time and not from the time that the defendants went into possession, claiming as their own and exercising acts of sole ownership."

The evidence showed that judgment was obtained against the executor March 21st, 1895, nulla bona return April 13, 1895. The action was commenced April 20, 1899.

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Related

Brock v. Kirkpatrick
52 S.E. 592 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.E. 72, 69 S.C. 231, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-kirkpatrick-sc-1904.