Brock v. O'Dell

21 S.E. 976, 44 S.C. 22, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 976 (Brock v. O'Dell) 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. O'Dell, 21 S.E. 976, 44 S.C. 22, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 71 (S.C. 1895).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

Stephen Clayton conveyed, by deed, four hundred acres of land, situate in Pickens County, in this State, to his son, Alfred T. Clayton. The said Alfred T. Clayton conveyed the said land in fee simple to one William T. O’Dell in 1882, who is now in possession of thesame, and thereafter, in 1884, departed this life. The said Stephen Clayton departed this life intestate, on the day of June, 1879, and his heirs at law, the plaintiffs and all the defendants, except W. T. O’Dell, now seek by this action to recover the possession and thereafter for a partition, according to law, of the said 400 acres of land. The defendant contests their right to recover said lands from him, claiming to hold the same in fee simple. The contention has arisen from the absence in the deed from Stephen Clayton to Alfred Clayton, of the word “heirs.” It is admitted that the word “heirs” does not appear in the deed, but the defendant claims to avoid the effect of such omission of [25]*25the word “heirs,” by showing that it was the intention of both grantor and grantee in said deed, that'such word “heirs” should have been inserted, but that through a mistake of the scrivener employed by the parties in preparing the deed, such word was omitted.

The case came on for trial before his honor, Judge Wallace, and a jury at the fall term, 1893, of the Court of Common Pleas for Pickens County, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant, W. T. O’Dell, which ripened into a judgment, after which the. heirs at law of Stephen Clayton, deceased, appealed therefrom. And it is the grounds of this appeal we are now to consider. For the purposes of our consideration of them, they may be treated under these heads: First Was it error in the Circuit Judge to allow the witness, W. W. Clayton, to testify as to what passed between Stephen Clayton, grantor, and J. B. Clayton, the scrivener, at the time the former signed the deed to and for Alfred T. Clayton, the grantee? In this form, different phases of difficulty in the admission of this testimony is suggested by the appellants: (a) The deed was introduced and spoke for itself, (b) The witness was heir at law of Stephen Clayton, and not competent, under section 400 of our Code, (c) The testimony of this witness tended to vary and add to a solemn deed, (d) The testimony was not competent as stating the conversation between Stephen Clayton and J. B. Clayton, because such conversation was addressed to the witness as well as J. B. Clayton, (e) The witness ought not to have been allowed to testify, as he held a deed from Stephen Clayton, liable to the same difficulty as existed in that of Stephen to Alfred Clayton.

1 The testimony of the witness, W. W. Clayton, he being the only witness offered by the defendant, O’Dell, to testify in regard to the alleged mistake of Stephen Clayton, the grantor, and Alfred T. Clayton, the grantee, in the deed around which both sets of claimants here revolve in their contention, is of great importance, for if his testimony is not competent, the defendant, O’Dell, has lost his defence. The crucial test in determining the competency of testimony, under section 400 of the Code, is, was the transaction or communica[26]*26tion one between a person now deceased and the witness? If it was, he is not competent to testify as to such transaction or communication; if it was not, he is competent. The facts brought before Judge Wallace in this connection, and upon which his ruling was sought, were these: Stephen Clayton had placed his four sous, J. B. Clayton, Alfred T. Clayton, W. W. Clayton, and Moses D. Clayton, respectively, in possession of a tract of his (Stephen’s) land some four or five years before August the 22d, 1854, and he had given to each of his daughters a slave or slaves after their respective marriages. On the 22d August, 1854, his son, J. B. Clayton, presented a will to Stephen Clayton to sign; whereupon Stephen Clayton, protesting that a will could be set aside by astute lawyers, thereby defeating the intention of the testator, declined to sign such will, declaring that he intended to give his sons his land and his daughters his negro slaves, and directed his son, J. B. Clayton, to write out a deed for his son, Alfred T. Clayton, for the 400 acres of which he was then in possession. The son, J. B. Clayton, wrote out the deed, which Stephen Clayton signed in the presence of G. W. Taylor and John Campbell, both of whom are now dead. On the same occasion, Stephen Clayton signed a deed to the witness, W. W. Clayton, for his land, which is in the same form as that to Alfred T. Clayton.

Now, when it is remembered that, under the testimony here offered, it was J. B. Clayton who produced the will which he requested his father, Stephen Clayton, to sign, and no connection is shown to have existed between J. B. Clayton and W. W. Clayton touching the will, and as the remarks of Stephen Clayton, whereby he gave his reasons for refusing to sign the will, were made to J. B. Clayton in the presence of W. W. Clayton, we cannot see wherein there was any communication or transaction of Stephen with W. W. Clayton that falls under section 400 of the Code.

2 As to the question involved in the subdivision (a), it is manifest that if it contains sound law, no mistake, fraud, accident, &c., in a deed could ever be corrected, unless some paper writing, contemporaneously made, was exhitited as the basis therefor. Such is not the law. Subdivision (b) [27]*27has been disposed of in the preceding remarks. As to subdivision (c), it may be said that it is unfortunate that the witnesses to the deed are both dead; but it will hardly be contended that the rights of W. T. O’Dell, or any other party, are to be affected by this providential dispensation, in case other testimony in their stead can be supplied. Stephen Clayton died in 1879, and this action was not commenced until the 27th day of April, 1892, a period of thirteen years, but only eight years after Alfred T. Clayton’s death. While the plaintiffs had a right to bring their action when they did — on the other hand, the defendant is not to be blamed for their delay. Any defences he may have, founded in law and supported by facts, are not to be prejudiced by plaintiff’s delay. No doubt, he would have hailed with delight the information that these two witnesses were both alive, and within reach of his summons for them to testify.

1 3 As to subdivision (d), it may be said that our preliminary remarks are an answer thereto. Lastly, as to subdivision (e), we do not see how the competency of W. W. Clayton is to be tested by the fact that he had a deed from his father, similar in its terms to that of Alfred T. Clayton. Such a fact might go to his credibility, but does not affect his competency. Besides, in this case, the appellants cannot complain as to this deed of W. W. Clayton. It was introduced, in testimony, but his honor ruled that it could not be used to reinforce the deed to Alfred T. Clayton, and no appeal is taken from this rulling.

4 The remaining grounds of appeal, the 6th, 7th, and 8th, have given us real concern; and we will, in their discussion, take them up seriatim, and will reproduce the text of each. “6th. Because his honor, the Circuit Judge, erred in refusing to charge the jury the 4th request of the plaintiff, which was as follows: ‘Assuming that all the testimony in regard to the execution of the deed from Stephen Clayton to A. T. Clayton, and of the intention of Stephen Clayton, by the deed in question, to convey the fee to A. T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 976, 44 S.C. 22, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-odell-sc-1895.