Carson v. McCaskill

99 S.E. 108, 111 S.C. 516, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 23, 1919
Docket10193
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 108 (Carson v. McCaskill) 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
Carson v. McCaskill, 99 S.E. 108, 111 S.C. 516, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 67 (S.C. 1919).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

This action was brought for the partition of a tract of land between plaintiffs and the McCaskill defendants. The defendant, Bank of Bethune, was made a party, on the ground that it was in possession of a part of the tract, claiming some interest therein. The bank set up title in severalty to a part of the tract. The issues between all the parties were settled, except those between plaintiffs and the bank, both of whom claim under deed from K. D. McCaskill. On November 17, 1914, he conveyed to plaintiffs his interest in a tract described as follows:

“All my interest in tract No. 1, containing 606 acres, more or less, bounded north by lands of J. T. Hough and J. M. Carson, south by lands of the estate of Kenneth McCaskill, deceased, east by lands of J. T. Hough, west by lands of S. C. and A. A. West and others. The above described tract comprises all my interest in the home tract of my deceased father, John Daniel McCaskill.”

*519 Six days thereafter, on November 23, 1914, he conveyed to the bank his interest in a tract described as follows:

“All my interest in 300 acres, more or less, known as the old Kenneth McCaskill place, bounded north by the home place formerly of J. D. McCaskill, deceased, east by lands formerly of R. M. Cooper, south by Mrs. N. K. Price and Wire Road, and west by Mrs. McNeely and lands formerly of B. J. Campbell.” •

The contest between plaintiffs and the bank grew out of the ambiguity in the description of the southern boundary of the land covered by plaintiffs’ deed, and the meaning of the words, “the home tract of my deceased father.”

A brief statement of facts will show how these ambiguities arose. Kenneth McCaskill, who was the grantor’s grandfather, had a large body of land and nine children, among them a son named John, who was grantor’s father. In 1878 Kenneth conveyed to John, by way of advancement, a tract of 500 acres which was cut off the northern end of his tract. John lived on that tract until he died, 'and it is admittedly covered by the description in plaintiffs’ deed. Kenneth died in 1878, and the remainder of his land was divided into eight tracts for division amongst his other heirs, John taking no part, as he had been fully advanced. In this division a tract of 300 acres lying adjacent to and south of John’s tract fell to Allen, who died some years after-wards, and in 1902 John acquired title thereto from Allen’s heirs. This is the land in dispute. The tract immediately south of Allen’s fell to another of Kenneth’s heirs, and, at date of plaintiffs’ deed, was owned by Mrs. Nannie K. Price. John died in 1907, leaving four heirs, the defendants, Mary and Christine, Mrs. Nannie K. Price, and K. D. McCaskill, the grantor of plaintiffs ánd the bank. Mrs. Price conveyed her interest in her father’s estate to her brother, K. D. McCaskill; so that at date of his deeds to plaintiffs and *520 the bank he. owned a half interest in the estate of his father — one-fourth by inheritance and one-fourth by purchase.

From this statement it appears that the description of the southern boundary in plaintiffs’ deed as “lands of the estate of Kenneth McCaskill!’ is misleading, because at that date neither the lands south of the 500-acre tract (which had J>een conveyed to John by Kenneth) nor those south of the 300-acre tract (which John had acquired from Allen’s heirs) were lands of the estate of Kenneth, though both had formerly been such. But at that time the lands south of the 500-acre tract were lands of the estate of John, and had been lands of the estate of Allen after they had been lands of the estate of Kenneth; and the lands south of the 300-acre tract were lands of Mrs. Nannie K. Price, though these, too, had formerly been lands of the estate of Kenneth.

It appears, also, that the use of the words “the home tract of my deceased father” raised another ambiguity, since they may be interpreted as intending to refer to the original home tract of 500 acres, or to the home tract as increased by the addition of the 300-acre tract acquired from Allen’s heirs.

Plaintiffs contended that the call for “lands of the estate of Kenneth McCaskill” as the boundary of the tract described in their deed covered the 300-acre tract, as that call was as well satisfied by referring it to the lands of Mrs. Price, which had formerly been lands of the estate of Kenneth McCaskill, as to the 300-acre tract, which also had formerly been lands of that estate, and that the words “the home tract of my deceased father” included the 300-acre tract, because that tract had been added to the original home tract and was a part of it at the death of his father, even though it had been acquired only five years before his death.

Although their grantor was present at the trial, plaintiffs sought to establish his intention to convey to them the 300- *521 acre tract by proving his acts and declarations before-and at the time of the execution of their deed. One of them, Mr. Ingram, testified in substance as follows:

“Before deed was máde, McCaskill went over the land with me and pointed out to me the land now claimed by the bank as a part of what he was conveying to us. I bought everything from him, except his interest in Kenneth McCaskill’s home place. That did not join the land we bought. In the office of Blakeney & Williams (the attorneys in whose office the deed was prepared and executed), he stated that he was selling his entire interest in his father’s estate.”

On cross-examination, he said:

“It was the understanding that I was buying only the interest in his home place. I notice the deed only called for the home tract. I suppose it got in there by error. Something must have been said about it somewhere for the home tract to have gotten in the deed. He showed where his father’s old home was.”

Mr. Carson, another of the plaintiffs, testified:

“Ingram told me, in the presence of McCaskill, he had bought all the land that McCaskill had inherited from his father, and everything, except one-fourth interest in his grandfather’s estate, which was a mile or two away from this tract. We then asked Mr. Williams to draw the deed, and gave about the same description as I have just given. He stated there that he was conveying the entire interest that he inherited from his father. He stated that the home tract in the deed there was what he inherited from his father. We knew nothing about the home tract of 40 years ago, but the home tract of'his father at his death. We understood it was what his father had at his death.”

Mr. Williams, the attorney who prepared the deed, testified :

“Ingram told McCaskill he wanted him to convey all the land poirited out the day before. I drew the deed with boundaries that McCaskill and Ingram agreed on as being *522 the correct boundaries of the land pointed out the day before. McCaskill stated that he conveyed all the property he then owned, that he got from the estate of his father, except his interest in the home place of Kenneth McCaskill.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 108, 111 S.C. 516, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-mccaskill-sc-1919.