Dorn v. Beasley

27 S.C. Eq. 408
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 27 S.C. Eq. 408 (Dorn v. Beasley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorn v. Beasley, 27 S.C. Eq. 408 (S.C. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

We see no sufficient reason to question the jurisdiction of the Court, as to which a doubt has been slightly intimated but not seriously urged at the hearing here.

In relation to the operation of the verdict at law, and the proper form of the writ of habere facias possessionem, and the mode in which it should be executed, as between the parties to the action at law, — this Court prefers to take the advice and judgment of the Law Judges: — these latter questions relating to doctrine and practice exclusively legal.

It is, therefore, ordered that this case be set down upon the doequet of the Court of Errors, for the argument of the questions just mentioned: and that a message be sent to the Law Court of Appeals, requesting the Law Judges to meet the Chancellors, for the hearing of them, and to appoint a time for that purpose.

JohnstoN, Dunkin, Dargan and Wardlaw, CC., concurring.

The questions sent up to the Court of Errors having been argued before it, the opinion of that Court upon those questions was now delivered by

Wardlaw, J.

Of the two questions which have been referred to this Court by the Chancery Bench, that which relates to the proper form of the writ of habere facias possessionem, where the plaintiff in trespass to try titles has recovered an undivided share of an entirety sued for, presents no difficulty. In the case of Jones and Moore vs. Owens, (5 Strob. 134,) the [413]*413practice which had long established the proper form of the verdict in such a case to be for a certain share or fraction of the whole described, was maintained; and carried to the extent of holding a verdict to be too vague to authorise a judgment upon it, when it found “ an undivided portion,” without specifying what fraction of the whole the portion was, or otherwise defining the part that was to be recovered. The judgment must conform to the verdict, and the writ of hab. fac. poss. to the judgment. Run. on Eject. 401, 432.

It is true that in the case of Dupont vs. Ervin, (2 Brev. 400,) the verdict was for four-ninths, and the judgment and writ of hab. fac. poss. seem from the report to have been for the whole ; yet a motion to set aside the writ for irregularity was rejected. But the Court acknowledged the necessity for the conformity of the judgment and writ to the verdict, and seems to have acted in rejecting the motion upon the ground that the proper mode of executing the writ was the same, whichever of the two forms may have been given to it.

This Court is then of opinion, that in this case, wherein William Beasley and wife, as plaintiffs at law, had a verdict for “ one undivided fourth part of the land” described, and entered judgment against the defendant, William B. Dorn, for recovery of the said undivided fourth part, the proper form has been adopted in the writ of hab. fac. poss. which requires the Sheriff to cause the said plaintiffs to have possession of “ the said one undivided fourth part of the tract of land, and appurtenances described as aforesaid.”

The other question, concerning the mode in which such a writ of hab. fac. poss. shall be executed, has been frequently mooted in the said Court of Appeals, for ten or twelve years last past, but hitherto has not been directly presented for adjudication. The case of McFadden and wife vs. Haley, (2 Bay, 457,) decided in 1802, shews that after grave doubts upon a point which was very plain in reference to the action of ejectment

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27 S.C. Eq. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorn-v-beasley-scctapp-1854.