Burnett v. Holliday Brothers, Inc.

305 S.E.2d 238, 279 S.C. 222, 1983 S.C. LEXIS 332
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 13, 1983
Docket21953
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 305 S.E.2d 238 (Burnett v. Holliday Brothers, Inc.) 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
Burnett v. Holliday Brothers, Inc., 305 S.E.2d 238, 279 S.C. 222, 1983 S.C. LEXIS 332 (S.C. 1983).

Opinion

Littlejohn, Justice:

The Petitioners in this action are the children and sole heirs at law of Sara R. Wannamaker, who died in July of 1948. They bring this action against Defendant Holliday Brothers, Inc., *223 claiming title to Lot No. 1 of block I of the Floral Beach subdivision. They claim ownership because George J. Holliday, in 1928, executed a fee simple conveyance deed to this property to their mother.

The defendant, answering the complaint, alleged that it and its predecessors in title were purchasers of the property in question for valuable consideration without notice of the Petitioners’ claim and that it and its predecessors in title have been in possession of the property for many years and that its title is not subject to the claim of the petitioners. It also set up in its Answer the defenses of laches and adverse possession, under the ten-year statute and the twenty-year statute.

The issues were referred to the Master in Equity for Horry County, who recommended that the Complaint be dismissed and that the court confirm title in the Defendant. Exceptions were taken to the Master’s report and recommendations. The Circuit Judge rejected the recommendation of the Master and held that the Petitioners were owners in fee simple of the property in contest.

The brief order of the Circuit Judge somewhat summarily ruled for the Petitioners without any analysis of the Master’s Report and without any contrary finding of fact. It was based on what the judge considered to be the “justice and equity” of the case. When the Master and the judge are in disagreement on factual findings, this Court “... may make findings in accordance with its own views of the preponderance or the greater weight of the evidence____” Townes Associates v. City of Greenville, 266 S. C. 81, 221 S. E. (2d) 773 (1976). We have, in actuality, no findings of fact by the trial judge, but for the purpose of our ruling will assume his findings were contrary to those of the Master. We are in agreement with the Master on both the facts and the law, and accordingly, we reverse.

In 1928, George J. Holliday signed and delivered a deed to Lot No. 1 to Sara R. Wannamaker. It was recorded twenty-four years later, in 1952. The deed also included Lot No. 2, with which we are not concerned. George J. Holliday died testate in February of 1941. The Warrant of Appraisement filed with the Probate Court contained over one hundred fifty (150) separate references to lots, parcels, and tracts of land. Many of these separate references included more than one lot, parcel or tract. The property which is the object of this action, if *224 included in the Appraisement, was not identifiable. At the time of his death, the deed records reflected ownership of the subject property in him. All of his real estate was left to his two sons, Joseph William Holliday and John Monroe Holliday, who were executors of the will. His daughters faired poorly in the will, each of the five being entitled to only $5,000 cash. The daughters contested the will. In order to settle the claim of Elizabeth Holliday Allen, the two brothers deeded the subject property (Lot No. 1) to her in 1944; the deed was recorded in 1949. Elizabeth Holliday Allen, in turn, in 1953, deeded the property for a valuable consideration to E. C. and Annie M. Sanders; the deed was recorded in 1954. The Sanders, in 1969, deeded the property for consideration to the defendant corporation; the deed was recorded in 1970. The defendant, Holliday Brothers, Inc., is a family held corporation, held by Joseph W. Holliday and John M. Holliday and members of their families. It is through this chain of title that the defendant herein claims ownership.

We now recite the chain through which the Petitioners claim ownership. George J. Holliday, in 1928, signed and delivered a deed to the subject property to Sara R. Wannamaker. She died in 1948, leaving Petitioners as her heirs. This deed was not recorded until 1952, which was four years after the death of the grantee. The record is silent as to who caused the deed to be recorded. The Master found, and we agree: “The record before me is again silent as to any activities, or asserted claims, or involvement of any kind on the part of the Petitioners with the property in question, until on or about the 6th day of June, 1977, when a Notice of Lis Pendens in this lawsuit was filed with the Clerk of Court in this County. It is somewhat singular that none of the Petitioners testified on their behalf____Nowhere is there any evidence of use of the property, or control of the property, or the payment of any Taxes, or any attempt to exercise dominion of the property in any fashion.”

We also agree with the Master when he said: “It is the contention of the Petitioners that Joseph W. Holliday, and John Monroe Holliday had actual knowledge, or notice, that George J. Holliday had transferred the property in question to Sara R. Wannamaker. The record does not establish this, and I so find and conclude.”

*225 The Master also found no evidence in the record to warrant a finding that John Monroe Holliday or Joseph W. Holliday or Elizabeth Holliday Allen or E. C. Sanders or Annie M. Sanders or any person having an interest in the defendant corporation had any actual knowledge of the 1928 deed to Sara R. Wannamaker until 1977. Each of the deeds through which the defendant claims were for a valuable consideration. Forbearance by Elizabeth Holliday Allen of her right to continue the pursuit of a contest of the will of her father was a valuable consideration.

We now print and adopt a portion of the Master’s Report as our disposition of the legal issues.

“Turning for the moment to some of the legal principles involved in this matter, it should be noted that our Recording Statutes provide, among other things, that Conveyances of Lands shall be valid as to subsequent purchasers, without notice only when recorded. The recorded instrument shall be valid so as to affect the rights of subsequent purchasers, for valuable consideration, without notice only from the day and hour of recording. Section 30-7-10 of the Code of Laws of South Carolinafor 1976. The purpose of the Recording Statute is to protect subsequent purchasers, for value without notice. Epps v. McCallum Realty Company, 139 S. C. 481, 138 S. E. 297 (1927). As the Cases repeatedly indicate, one who neglects to record Conveyances must suffer the consequences of his neglect.

“As to purchasers for value, without notice, our Court has indicated that a purchaser for value, without notice, is one who

(a) makes payment, or furnishes consideration before notice of an outstanding claim; [or]
(b) purchases and acquires title before notice of an outstanding claim; [or]
(c) makes a bona fide purchase and acquisition without notice.

Jones v. Eichholz, 212 S. C. 411, 48 S. E. (2d) 21 (1948); Cook v. Knight, 173 S. C. 278, 175 S. E. 506 (1934); and various other Cases cited in these Opinions.

*226

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Bluebook (online)
305 S.E.2d 238, 279 S.C. 222, 1983 S.C. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnett-v-holliday-brothers-inc-sc-1983.