DuPont v. DuBos

29 S.E. 665, 52 S.C. 244, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 6, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 665 (DuPont v. DuBos) 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
DuPont v. DuBos, 29 S.E. 665, 52 S.C. 244, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 74 (S.C. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

This action, which was commenced on the day of June, 1889, was once before this Court on appeal from the order of reference made by Judge Hudson, and on that appeal this Court affirmed the order appealed from, on the ground that the issues raised herein were equitable. 33 S. C., 389. At the reference all parties to the action offered testimony, and it came on to be heard before his Honor, Judge Benet, on the pleadings and testiT mony.

A demurrer was interposed on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This demurrer was overruled. Judge Benet, by his decree, adjudged that the deed which was alleged to be forged was a forgery, and ordered the same to be cancelled, with a direction to defendant, Mrs. DuBos, to deliver possession of a certain tract of land in St. Andrews Parish, [248]*248known as “Rose Cottage,” to the plaintiff, and ordered a reference to one of the masters of Charleston County, to ascertain and report the amount on the mortgage debts held by the defendant, Rutledge, as executor of the last will of the late Gen. B. H. Rutledge. From so much of this decree as affected the defendant, Mrs. DuBos, both as to her demurrer and also on the merits, she has appealed on more than forty grounds. It remains, therefore, for this Court to pass upon the same.

We will first consider those relating to the demurrer to the complaint, and this we conceive can be best done by first reproducing the complaint, which was as follows: “The plaintiff above named, complaining, &c., alleges: 1. That Thomas Bannister Seabrook, late of Edisto Island, in the State of South Carolina, departed this life on the day of April, 1839, leaving of force his last will and testament, which'was duly admitted to probate by the court of ordinary for Charleston District (now county), in State aforesaid, on the 2d day of May, A. D. 1839. That of said will he appointed his daughter, Elizabeth Clark Seabrook, executrix. That the said Elizabeth, after the making of said will, intermarried with one Andrew Milne, and under the name of Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne qualified as executrix of the said will, and undertook the burthen of the administration thereof. 2. That by the said will the said testator, Thomas Bannister Seabrook, devised to his said daughter (who will hereinafter be designated as Mrs. Milne) certain real estate, among which was the plantation in St. Andrews Parish and the house and lot in the city of Charleston, hereinafter more particularly described in fee conditional at the common law, that is to say: ‘to her and the lawful heirs of her body.’ ' 3. That the said Mrs. Milne died on the day of November, 1882, aged ninety-six years, without ever having had issue at any time. 4. That upon the death of the said Mrs. Milne, the plaintiff, Gilbert Geddes DuPont, was the sole heir at law of aforesaid testator,. Thomas Bannister Seabrook, in esse, and solely enti[249]*249titled to take, tinder the limitations of the said will, the said plantation and house and lot. 5. That the said Mrs. Milne, on the 28th day of October, A. D. 1876, executed her last will and testament, and on the 20th day of October, 1880, executed a codicil thereto, wherein and whereby she undertook to dispose of said plantation and house and lot to persons whom she designated in said will and codicil as Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne and Martha Bannister, wife of A. C. Whitridge. That these devisees are and were strangers in blood to the aforesaid Thomas Bannister Sea-brook, and, in fact, do not bear the names given to them in the said will, except by courtesy and usage. That they were not blood relations of the said Mrs. Milne. On information and belief, the plaintiff states further that they were never adopted by the said Mrs. Milne, but were treated from their early youth as her adopted daughters. Their real names the plaintiff does not know, and will distinguish them as above. 6. That the said Martha Bannister Whit-ridge had, prior to the death of Mrs. Milne, intermarried with A. C. Whitridge, of Baltimore, Maryland, and had removed to that city, and shortly after the probate of the will of Mrs. Milne, she, Martha Bannister Whitridge, conveyed her interest in the property devised to her to the said Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne. 7. That immediately upon the death of the said Mrs. Milne, the said Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne entered upon and took possession of both the said plantation and said house and lot, and shortly thereafter this plaintiff resolved to assert his rights in the premises, and for that purpose, on the 20th day of January, 1888, began proceedings at law against the said Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne and Martha Bannister Whitridge, to recover possession of the said house and lot in Charleston. 8. That during the pendency of such proceedings, negotiations were opened between the solicitors of the plaintiff and the defendant herein, for an adjustment of said suit, and during such negotiations, the deed, a copy of which is annexed to this complaint and marked exhibit A, was set up [250]*250by the defendant, Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne, as a genuine deed and as a bar to the plaintiff’s claim in the premises. The plaintiff at that time did not doubt the genuineness of said deed, and influenced and deceived thereby, compromised said case, and conveyed to the defendant the aforesaid plantation, the said Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne executing to him a quir claim deed of the said house and lot. 9. That during the said negotiations, one Louis DuBos was the agent of and acted for the said Elizabeth Clark Seabrook Milne, his relations with her being those of a confidential friend and adviser. Shortly after the said compromise was effected, and the said plantation conveyed by this plaintiff to the said Eliz. Clark Seabrook ’Milne, she and the said Louis DuBos intermarried. She will hereafter be known as Mrs. DuBos. 10. That subsequent information, obtained some time in the year 1888, and not earlier, aroused the suspicion of this plaintiff that the said deed was a forged and false document, and was known to be such by the said Louis DuBos and Mrs. DuBos at the time it was used as above stated. He, this plaintiff, immediately began his investigation on this point, and, after careful investigation, became convinced, in April, 1888, that the said deed was a forgery. And on information and belief, this plaintiff states the deed to be a forged and false deed, and that it was known by the said Louis DuBos and Mrs. DuBos to be forged and false, and was then and there falsely and fraudulently used by them to influence the plaintiff and to obtain from him a surrender of his rights. That this plaintiff was misled by said deed, and, considering it a genuine and valid deed, was induced to give up a portion of his indisputable property to the defendant under the name of a compromise, without any consideration whatever, and that the whole transaction was a deceit on the part of the said Mrs. DuBos and her said agent and confidential friend and adviser, Louis DuBos, practiced on this plaintiff, and an imposition upon him. 11. That whether or not the said deed was forged, and whether or not it was knowingly used [251]*251by the defendant to influence the plaintiff and force him to the aforesaid compromise, still the plaintiff avers and says that the said deed acted as a surprise to him; that he mistook his rights in the premises, and without any consideration whatever gave up a large portion of his inheritance, just after it had fallen to him, and when he was a young man with little or no experience in such matters.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 665, 52 S.C. 244, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-dubos-sc-1898.