Foster v. Foster

62 S.E. 320, 81 S.C. 307, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 11, 1908
Docket7014
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 320 (Foster v. Foster) 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
Foster v. Foster, 62 S.E. 320, 81 S.C. 307, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 262 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The land involved in this case was a part of the property of the late Joseph H. Foster. After *309 his death his widow, Mrs. Charlotte R. Foster, became administratrix of his estate, and on' 20th April, 1887, undertook to grant a right of way over the lands of the estate to the Charleston, Cincinnati and Chicago' Railroad Company. That company entered under the grant and appropriated the land described in the complaint to its use as a part of its right of way. The defendant, Southern Railway Company, having acquired the interest of the Charleston, Cincinnati and Chicago Railroad Company, now holds and uses the property as part of its right of way.

The plaintiffs, the children of Joseph H. Foster, allege in their complaint in this action for partition that the railroad company acquired under this grant from' Mrs. Foster a one-third interest in the land, and that they are the owners in fee of the remaining- two-thirds.

Mrs. Foster by her answer admits all allegations of the complaint, except that the railroad company owns one-third interest in the land under the grant from her, and joins in the prayer of the complaint. The Southern Railway Company sets up the following defense: First. That it acquired a good title to the land for its roadbed and right of way by the grant of Mrs. Foster in 1887. Second. That the plaintiffs brought an action for the recovery of the identical land in the Court of Common Pleas for Lancaster county in 1899, against the South Carolina and Georgia Extension Railroad Company, the lessor and predecessor in title of the Southern Railway Company, and, after issue joined, took an order of discontinuance more than two years before t'he commencement of the present action; and, therefore, is precluded from bringing this action against the Southern Railway Company under the- terms of subdivision 2 of section 98 of Code of Procedure. Third. That in a proceeding to marshal assets and for partition, to which the plaintiffs were parties, all the lands of the estate of Joseph H. Foster, including the fee in the land now in dispute, were sold and duly conveyed to *310 other persons, and the plaintiffs, therefore, have no> interest in the land.

On the trial of the issue of title thus made, after all the evidence was in, the Circuit Judge refused to direct a verdict for defendant, and, after a verdict had been rendered for plaintiffs, refused a motion for a new trial. Error is assigned in the refusal of these motions, in the charge to the jury, and in the exclusion of testimony. As the same points are made in several different forms, it will not be necessary to refer in detail to the thirty exceptions appearing in the record.

1 The first defense may be at once eliminated from the case, for it is obvious the conveyance of Mrs. Foster could not affect the interests of the plaintiffs as heir at law of their father, Joseph H. Foster. C. & W. C. Ry. Co. v. Reynolds, 69 S. C., 481, 48 S. E., 476.

2 Due consideration' of the effect on this action of the former action for the recovery of the land, as well as of that for partition of the lands of Joseph H. Foster, requires a statement of the relation of the several parties to the land after the execution of the deed of Mrs. Foster, purporting to convey to the railroad company a right of way. Mrs. Foster did not undertake to convey the fee to the railroad company, but only an easement, and, therefore, after the execution of her deed, her relation to the land remained that of tenant in common with her children, her interest having imposed upon it t'he easement of the railroad right of way, coextensive with her one-third interest. The South Carolina and Georgia Extension Railroad Con> pany, to whose rights the Southern Railway 'Company succeeds, held under Mm. Foster’s deed an easement in the land occupied as a right of way only to the extent of the one-third interest which Mrs. Foster could convey. Such being the relation of the several parties to the land, the children of Joseph H. Foster 'brought their action against the South Carolina' and Georgia Extension Railroad Company to *311 recover possession of the entire land held by it as a right of way under the deed made by Mrs. Foster. The evidence shows that action was discontinued more than two' years before the commencement of this present action. The defendant insists the delay for more than two years was fatal to this action, and the Circuit Court should have so instructed the jury. The Code of Procedure, section 98, subdivision 2, provides: “The plaintiff, in all actions for recovery of real property, or the recovery of the possession thereof, is hereby limited to two actions for the same, and no more: Provided, That the costs of the first action be first paid, and the second action be brought within two years from the rendition of the verdict or judgment in the first action, or from the granting of a nonsuit or discontinuance therein.” This statute does not apply, for the former action was for the recovery of real estate, while this is not, but, on the contrary, is an action for partition. On this point the case of Elmore v. Davis, 49 S. C., 1, 26 S. E., 898, is conclusive.

3 We consider next, under the third defense, whether the evidence showed conclusively that the land in dispute was sold in the proceeding instituted by Mrs. Foster against her children, the plaintiffs in this action, for the settlement of Joseph H. Foster’s estate. On this issue all evidence tending to establish the sale of this land must be excluded, except that admitted to< be true, or offered by the plaintiffs, or appearing in judicial proceedings to which the plaintiffs were parties.

In the first place, it is to be observed, the answer and supplemental complaints, filed for the settlement of the estate, taken together, show on their face an intention to dispose of all lands and settle the entire estate. One of the tracts of land mentioned and described in the complaint was the “Jones tract.” and the evidence for the plaintiff shows the land in dispute to be a part of the land known as the “Jones tract.” There is no exception or exclusion in the *312 complaint of the land occupied as a right of way from the general designation and description of the Jones tract; on the contrary, the allegation is, that the plaintiffs and defendants own no other lands in common in this State except those described in the complaint. There cannot be the least doubt that the action comtemplated a sale of all the interests of the parties as heirs of Joseph H. Foster in the Jones tract, as well as all other lands of the estate of Joseph H. Foster.

Under orders of sale, made by the Court in that cause, the clerk of the court sold the Jones tract in these parcels, twenty-five acres more or less, to Mrs. Charlotte R. Foster, one-tenth acre to W. J. Cunningham, and three acres to Dr. R. C. McManus. In the deed to- Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 320, 81 S.C. 307, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-foster-sc-1908.