Clarendon Holding Co. v. Witherspoon

188 S.E.2d 480, 258 S.C. 296, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 336
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 2, 1972
Docket19407
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 188 S.E.2d 480 (Clarendon Holding Co. v. Witherspoon) 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
Clarendon Holding Co. v. Witherspoon, 188 S.E.2d 480, 258 S.C. 296, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 336 (S.C. 1972).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This action was brought by the plaintiff to quiet title to a 28-acre tract of land located at or near the intersection of Highway I-9S and U. S. Highway 301 in Clarendon County. The complaint alleges that Clarendon Holding Company is the owner of the subject property, and that R. R. DuRant, Jr., and Thomasine G. Mason are its duly appointed trustees, and as such hold title to the property of the corporation. It alleges that the defendant Carroll Witherspoon has, or may claim an interest in the property and that such constitutes a cloud on the plaintiff’s title.

The defendant Carroll Witherspoon, a person non compos mentis, through his guardian ad litem George H. Wither-spoon, answered the complaint, alleging that plaintiff had no title to the land, and alleging that plaintiff’s purported title was procurred wrongfully under an invalid court order. Further answering, and by way of counterclaim, defendant Carroll Witherspoon asked that he be declared sole owner of the property and placed in possession of the same.

The defendant Howard Elkins, as committee for the defandant Carroll Witherspoon, answered the complaint, alleging that he performed services as committee in good faith and submitted the rights of his ward to the protection of the court.

After depositions were taken and requests for admissions submitted and answered by several witnesses, counsel for the defendant Carroll Witherspoon moved for summary judgment under Rule 44 of the circuit court. There were several grounds to the motion, which asked the court to rule “. . . Carroll Witherspoon is the owner in fee simple of the real property involved in this action, free and clear of any claim of Plaintiffs or those holding under them.” We need consider only ground number 3 :

*300 “3. Asa matter of law, the alleged Committee for Carroll Witherspoon. Howard Elkins, did not perform his legal obligations to his ward, Carroll Witherspoon, nor take any action to protect his interests, in the proceedings resulting in the sale of Carroll Witherspoon’s land to Plaintiffs, all of which inaction resulted from Howard Elkins’ connivance with Plaintiffs to obtain title to. Carroll Witherspoon’s lands for Plaintiffs, and such proceedings are therefore null and void and not binding on Carroll Witherspoon.”

The trial judge granted the motion on several grounds. We affirm on the limited ground hereinafter indicated. The facts which served as a basis for granting summary judgment on ground 3 as indicated above are not substantially in dispute.

In the early 1960’s it became common knowledge that Interstate Highway 95 (“1-95”) would be constructed through Clarendon County. The plans called for 1-95 to intersect U. S. Highway 301 at a point approximately four and one-half miles southwest of Manning.

Clarendon Holding Company, Inc., the plaintiff, was organized about this time. Its founders contemplated the purchase of property along the path of the new highway as an investment.

Incident to the procurement of rights-of-way by the highway department for the purpose of constructing Highway 1-95, several members of the bar at Manning were called upon to examine titles to real estate. In the course of abstracting titles, Mrs. Thomasine G. Mason learned that Carroll Witherspoon owned the 28-acre tract which is the subject of this action. She contacted his uncle, John Witherspoon, to get information relative to the family. Carroll Witherspoon had inherited the land while a patient in the State Hospital. John Witherspoon talked with her concerning Carroll’s getting some benefit from the property. He said that the land was nonproductive and indicated a desire to do something for *301 Carroll, who had been confined in the State Hospital since 1930. He was conditionally released in 1970.

In the early fall of 1964 Mr. John G. Dinkins (now deceased) of the Manning bar, who was attorney for and stockholder of the Clarendon Holding Company, discussed with Mason the possibility of buying Carroll Witherspoon’s land. Following the discussions, John Witherspoon petitioned the probate court for the appointment of Howard Elkins as committee for Carroll Witherspoon. Elkins was executive vice-president of the Bank of Clarendon. Two of the stockholders of the plaintiff were officers in the same bank, and Dinkins was attorney for the bank as well as for the plaintiff. The probate court appointed Elkins committee on October 28, 1964.

On November 4, six days after his appointment as committee, Elkins signed an ex parte petition asking the Court of Common Pleas to approve the sale of Witherspoon’s 28 acres to Clarendon Holding Company. The incompetent Carroll Witherspoon was not made a party to that action for the sale of his land, and the petition was not served upon him nor upon the superintendent of the hospital where he was confined.

The petition to sell alleged that Carroll Witherspoon was not receiving any benefit from the land and that the property was not producing income; that the committee had been offered $12,500 (less attorney’s fees, surveyor charges, unpaid taxes and necessary costs and expenses) by the Clarendon Holding Company for a deed to the property. It further alleged that such was a full and fair price. The petitioner prayed for an order of the court authorizing consummation of the sale. To the petition was attached an affidavit of S. J. Brogdon and N. R. Cousar, realtors, who expressed the opinion that $12,500 was a full, fair and just price. Each stated that it would be to the best interest of Carroll Wither-spoon for the sale to be made and the money reinvested.

*302 On November 10, 1964 the Court of Common Pleas for Clarendon County issued its order based on the petition, authorizing and directing Elkins, as committee to convey Carroll Witherspoon’s land to Clarendon Holding Company. A deed was so executed. Since that time the Clarendon Holding Company has deeded the property to R. R. DuRant, Jr., and Thomasine G. Mason as trustees for the stockholders.

At the instigation of counsel for the defendant Carroll Witherspoon, depositions of R. R. DuRant, Jr., and Joe P. Moore, stockholders of the plaintiff, and of Howard Elkins were taken. Later the deposition of Mason was taken. In addition, requests for admissions were submitted to Elkins, DuRant and Mason. It was upon the basis of these depositions, admissions, court records and the pleadings, that the judge granted the motion of defendant Carroll Witherspoon for summary judgment and held that he was owner of the land.

On this appeal the plaintiff challenges the correctness of the judge’s ruling on several grounds. We think that the judge properly held that the committee did not afford Carroll Witherspoon true representation in the proceeding wherein the sale of his property was authorized. The judge’s conclusion on this point is clearly established by the record to the exclusion of all other reasonable inferences. The facts are established by Elkins’ own deposition and admissions. He is to be commended for his frankness and honesty in testifying. The proof is fortified in essential details by the other depositions and admissions.

Elkins never met John Witherspoon or Carroll Wither-spoon, nor did he know anything about them.

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Related

Fleming Ex Rel. Fleming v. Asbill
483 S.E.2d 751 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1997)
Fleming v. Asbill
42 F.3d 886 (Fourth Circuit, 1994)
Clarendon Holding Co. Ex Rel. DuRant v. Witherspoon
201 S.E.2d 924 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.E.2d 480, 258 S.C. 296, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarendon-holding-co-v-witherspoon-sc-1972.