Glenn v. Walker

100 S.E. 706, 113 S.C. 1, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 20, 1919
Docket10283
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 706 (Glenn v. Walker) 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
Glenn v. Walker, 100 S.E. 706, 113 S.C. 1, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 177 (S.C. 1919).

Opinion

The opinion of the 'Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Gary.

This action was commenced in 1916 to recover possession of the land described in the complaint.

The defendant denied the allegations of the complaint, except so much thereof as alleges that the plaintiff and the defendant claim from a common source of title, to wit, from W. W. Harris, who died prior to the year 1875, and sets up the defenses of adverse possession and the statute of limitations. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the land in dispute, and the defendant appealed.

1 The plaintiff, as one of the links in his chain of title, introduced in evidence the records in the probate Court relative to the settlement of the estate of W. W. Harris, among which was an order for the sale of his real estate, including the land in dispute, dated the 7th of August, 1875; also report of sale showing that J. R. Tittle was the purchaser at public outcry. It was admitted that Mrs. Sarah Tittle, widow of J. R. Tittle, had searched for a deed from the probate Judge to J. R. Tittle, but that she could not find it, and that she knew nothing about it. Thereupon the plaintiff offered in evidence the record of the mortgage given by J. R. Tittle to. the probate Judge, dated the 6th of September, 1875, reciting an indebtedness to the probate Judge in the sum of $152 for the purchase money of part of the real estate of W. W. Harris, deceased. The defendant objected to the introduction in evidence of said mortgage on the ground of irrelevancy, and on the ground that it was not competent evidence to prove a legal title.

The following principle was announced in Spears v. Oakes, 4 Rich. 347:

“A mortgage of the premises in dispute was executed by Spears, the plaintiffs’ ancestor, to the South Carolina Society, to secure the purchase money; then that that was paid, and satisfaction entered on the record. * * * It was proved *5 that Spears died in possession of, the lot. These facts, it is not denied, made out prima facie title in the plaintiffs; but it is said such proof was not conclusive. Concede it, and how does that help the defendant? The jury is bound to respect a prima facie showing, until rebutted, just as much as they would be any other. Indeed, if not rebutted, such a showing establishes the case, and the jury have no right to say, We will not find accordingly. But the plaintiffs’ case is not merely prima facie. I think it is conclusively shown that the title of the South Carolina Society was in George T. Spears; the mortgage was by him to the South Carolina Society to pay the purchase money. This was an admission in law that he had the title of the South Carolina, Society to the premises, otherwise he had nothing to convey, and thereby mortgage.”

Furthermore, after the lapse of 20 years the law presumes that there was a title. Riddlehoover v. Kinard, 1 Hill Eq. 376; McLeod v. Rogers, 2 Rich. 19; Corbett v. Fogle, 72 S. C. 312, 51 S. E. 884; Young v. McNeill, 78 S. C. 143, 59 S. E. 986; Powers v. Smith, 80 S. C. 110, 61 S. E. 222; Lewis v. Pope, 86 S. C. 85, 68 S. E. 680.

The exception raising this question is overruled.

2, 3 The will of Benjamin Wofford, from whom the plaintiff traces his title, was offered in evidence. The sixth item thereof, is as' follows: “I hereby fully authorize and empower my executors, hereinafter named, as soon after my death as convenient, to collect all debts due ■my estate, to sell and convey the real estate at public auction, or private sale, as they may deem best, and make good and sufficient title thereto, and on such terms as they think best, and to divide and distribute the fund, arising under this item of my will, as directed in the fifth item of my will.”

W. E. Wait and J. N. Holcombe were appointed executors of said will, and both duly qualified. On the 28th of September, 1894, J. N. Holcombe executed an instrument of *6 writing, whereby he undertook to delegate to W. E. Wait, the other executor, all the powers conferred upon him by the will. ' The defendant’s attorneys objected to the introduction in evidence of said instrument on the ground: “That under the terms of that will and under the law it was incompetent and impossible for J. N. Holcombe to give to W. E. Wait the power to exercise the duties of both executors under the will; that is, for one executor to give to the other the power of sale that was by the terms of the will vested in such coexecutors.”

The case of Black v. Erwin, Harp. 411, decides that a power coupled with a trust cannot be delegated to another. But, for reasons hereinafter stated, there was no prejudicial .error in admitting the instrument.

The record contains this statement:

“Next we offered book * * * containing record of deed purporting to be from W. L. Wait and J. N. Holcombe, executors, to Mrs. Ella Wofford, of date July 26, 1895. Said recorded deed recites that the indenture 'is between W. E: Wait and J. N. Holcombe, executors of the late will and testament of Dr. Benjamin Wofford, deceased,’ and refers to the authority of said executors given under and by the last will and testament of Dr. Benjamin Wofford, deceased, and purports to convey to Mrs. Ella B. Wofford in fee a certain tract of land. * * * The deed is signed. 'W. E- Wait, Executor. (Seal.) J. N. Holcombe, Executor (Seal),by W. L. Wait, Attorney in Fact.’ ”

The defendant’s attorneys objected to said deed “as being a valid link in plaintiff’s chain of title, upon the ground that it was not competent for W. E. Wait to act as attorney, and he could not thereby bind the estate and make a valid deed, and it conveys nothing, because it is not signed in the proper way to convey a legal title, in that, to be valid, it should have been signed by both W. E. Wait and J. N. Holcombe 'as executors.’ ”

*7 This deed is to be construed without reference to the instrument of writing signed by J. N. Holcombe. The fact that the deed was signed, “J. N. Holcombe, Executor, by W. L. Wait, Attorney in Fact,” does not indicate that its execution was without the approval of Holcombe; on the contrary, it appears upon its face to be the joint deed of Wait and Holcombe, executors. A deed made under a power of attorney must be executed in the name of the principal. Webster v. Brown, 2 S. C. 428; De Walt v. Kinard, 19 S. C. 292; Johnson v. Johnson, 27 S. C. 309, 3 S. E. 606, 13 Am. St. Rep. 636.

When the name of Holcombe was signed by Wait as attorney in fact, it appeared upon its face to be a valid deed, as it was not essential to its validity that the deed should recite the power under which he acted. The rule is thus stated in 22 Enc. of Raw, 1012:

“In the execution of a power it is mot essential that the donee expressly refer to the power and profess to execute it.

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141 S.E. 375 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 706, 113 S.C. 1, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-walker-sc-1919.