Chafee & Co. v. Rainey

21 S.C. 11, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 22, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 S.C. 11 (Chafee & Co. v. Rainey) 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
Chafee & Co. v. Rainey, 21 S.C. 11, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 66 (S.C. 1884).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McIver.

These two cases, involving the same question, were heard and will be considered together. The questions are: 1. Whether the respondent is entitled to claim a homestead as against the judgments of the appellants; 2. Whether the circuit judge had the power to correct a mistake in his decree after it was filed.

The facts out of which these questions arise are as follows: The judgment in favor of Chafee & Co. was recovered on February 11th, 1874, and that in favor of Johnson on June 24th, 1875. There is also “a judgment in favor of Lavinia Burridge for $97.24, dated June 24th, 1875, on record, but unrenewed.” In all these judgments the causes of action arose since the adoption of the present constitution. The respondent Rainey has been married three times, and resided, with his several wives, on the lot in which the homestead has been assigned to him, viz., with the first wife from April, 1862, to November, 1876, when she died; with his second wife from May, 1878, to June, 1880, when she died; and with his third wife, who is still living, from June, 1881, to the present time. The respondent during all this time had children living, but not residing with him, being only temporary visitors to the homestead at various times. He also had servants at the homestead continuously from the date of his first marriage.

Under executions issued in the above stated cases, the sheriff on December 6th, 1882, levied on two lots, Nos. 55 and 56, in the town of Georgetown, and on December 20th, 1882, the respondent required the sheriff to have his homestead set off to him. Appraisers were accordingly appointed, who on February 16th,' 1883, made their return, assigning as a homestead to respondent lot No. 55, which they valued at $1,300, and certified that the same was not susceptible of a division. In accordance with the statute, the surplus, $300, was paid to the sheriff, and the other lot, No. 56, was sold by the sheriff for $600, and this sum, together with the surplus above mentioned, was applied by the sheriff to the executions in the order of priority. The judgment in favor of Chafee & Co. was satisfied, leaving a balance in the sheriff’s hands, insufficient, however, to satisfy the other judgments.

[16]*16The appellants duly filed exceptions to the claim of homestead:

1. Upon the ground that the judgments were a vested lien upon both of the said lots “while the respondent was a single man without a family, and before he became the head of a family, and his subsequent marriage cannot divest the already vested right of the creditor.” 2. Because the property assigned as a homestead exceeded in value the amount exempt, as such, under the constitution and laws. The exceptions were argued before Judge Aldrich at March term, 1883, of the court for Georgetown, and on May 1st, 1883, he filed his decree, in which, after elaborately discussing the question raised by the first exception, and showing most unmistakably that, in his opinion, the exception was not well founded, but that respondent was entitled to his homestead exemption, he concluded his decree in these words: “I think this disposes of the question, and the application for homestead is dismissed with costs.”

On May 12th, 1883, Judge Aldrich, on the application of defendant’s attorney, and without notice to the adverse party, filed the following order, which, after stating the cases as above, and the venue, is in these words: “I have received a letter from Mr. Walker, attorney for Rainey, in which he informs me that, in my decree in this case, I close the same by saying: ‘The application for homestead is dismissed with costs.’ This is an error. I should have said: The exceptions to the return are overruled with costs. The clerk is directed to amend the original decree, and file this supplemental order with it as his authority for so doing.”

The plaintiffs appeal upon the following grounds: 1. “That the judgments in the above cases became a vested lien on the realty in which a homestead is set up while the defendant was a single man without a family, and before he became the head of a family, and his subsequent marriage cannot divest the already vested right of the creditor. 2. Because his honor having filed his decree dismissing the application for homestead, had no right, on ex parte application, to reverse his own decree without notice to the opposite party, and certainly had no right to instruct the clerk of the court to do so.”

We will consider the second ground of appeal first. It is perfectly clear that the concluding words of the decree of Judge [17]*17Aldrich, as originally written, not only did not express the judgment which he intended to announce, but expressed precisely the opposite of such intention. Indeed, strictly speaking, there was no “application for homestead” before him for consideration. The homestead had already been assigned in the mode prescribed by law, and the only question before him was whether the exceptions to such assignment, filed by the creditors, should be sustained or overruled. That was the question which he considered, and after arguing to show that such exceptions were not well founded, he concludes by saying, “I think this disposes of the question,” and then adds the words which have given rise to the difficulty, and which were not responsive to the question he had been considering, viz., “And the application for homestead is dismissed with costs.” It is quite manifest, therefore, that the addition of these words was a mere clerical error, which, in our opinion, he had full authority to correct. As is said in 2 Dan. Oh. Dr., 1233, in speaking of rectifying decrees: “In cases, however, in which a clerical error has crept into the decree, or in which some ordinary direction has been omitted, the court will entertain applications to rectify it, even though it has been passed and entered. * * * It is, nevertheless, to be observed, that it is a principle of the court, that no alteration can be made in a decree on motion with.out a rehearing, except in a matter of clerical error or of form, or where the matter to be inserted is clearly consequential on the directions already given.”

It is said, however, that even granting the power to make the correction, it could not be exercised upon a mere ex parte motion without notice to the adverse party. Where the error corrected is purely clerical, as in this case, we can conceive of no reason why notice should be given to the adverse party. It is a matter solely for the consideration of the judge who committed the error. And what light the adverse party, if notified, could throw, upon the question, whether the error complained of is a clerical error, we do not readily perceive. Besides, the authorities are clear that no notice of a motion to correct a clerical error, or an error of form in a judgment, is necessary. Giles v. Pratt, 1 Hill, 239; Ashmore v. Charles, 14 Rich., 63. Nor do we think that there is anything in the objection that the correction was made by the [18]*18clerk under the order of the judge, instead of being made by the judge with his own hand. The clerk is the officer of the court, and any mere ministerial act which he does by the order of the court is the act of the court itself.

Again, it is urged that Judge Aldrich, as judge of the second Circuit, after the adjournment of the court in Georgetown, the last court in the third Circuit, no longer had any jurisdiction in cases arising in that Circuit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.C. 11, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chafee-co-v-rainey-sc-1884.