Gowdy v. Kelley

194 S.E. 156, 185 S.C. 415, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 8, 1937
Docket14580
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 194 S.E. 156 (Gowdy v. Kelley) 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
Gowdy v. Kelley, 194 S.E. 156, 185 S.C. 415, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 43 (S.C. 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fishburne.

On October 28, 1870,-one Charles McAllister, of Williamsburg County, made, executed, and delivered the following deed: “Know all men by these presents that, I, Charles McAllister, Planter of the County of Williamsburg in the State aforesaid for and in consideration of the natural love and affection which I have and bear towards my beloved daughter, Sarah Margaret Kelley, wife of Dr. Middleton Kelley and for and in the consideration of the sum of One Dollar to me in hand paid by the said Sarah Margaret Kelley have given, granted, bargained, sold, bequeathed and delivered and by these presents do freely give, grant and deliver unto the said Sarah Margaret Kelley my plantation on which I now reside during her natural life and at her death the said plantation is to become the absolute property of my grandson, Charles Middleton Kelley, above named, the said plantation is bounded as follows, to wit: [then follows the description], and I do hereby warrant and forever defend all and singular the said premises unto the said parties and against any person or persons whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same or any part thereof.”

A large portion of the tract of land described in the deed is located in the town of Rake City, now in Florence County, and has been subdivided into lots, upon which are located numerous business and residential properties. These lots were purchased by the present owners or by their predecessors in title, from Charles Middleton Kelley, the grandson *418 of the grantor, and they hold under deeds purporting to convey the fee.

Some time prior to the year 1917, the deed which we have set out came under the serious question as to the estate and interest conveyed by the grantor to Kelley, as a result of which the plaintiff, S. W. Gowdy, who owns one of the lots carved out of the original tract, brought this suit for the purpose of having the deed reformed. The prayer for judgment is : “That the said deed may be construed and if found defective through the omission of the word heirs, then that it be reformed and corrected so as to express and effectuate the intention of the said Charles McAllister.”

The action was brought in 1917, and the heirs at law of Charles McAllister were made parties defendant, including Charles Middleton Kelley. By subsequent orders made in the cause all persons owning or claiming an interest in the property were joined as defendants.

The defendant Kelley answered, joining in the prayer of the complaint, and alleging that the deed in question vested in him a fee-simple title upon the death of his mother, and in addition thereto he set up an alleged contract between his mother and his father, Dr. Kelley, on the one hand, and Charles McAllister, on the other, for the transfer and conveyance of the fee to this land to Charles M. Kelley. He further alleged that the consideration for the deed consisted in the executed promise* and agreement of his mother and father to leave their home in Clarendon County and move to the home of McAllister, in the then village of Lake City, and care for him.

The heirs at law of Charles McAllister, other than Charles Middleton Kelley, answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint, and alleged that in the deed from Charles McAllister Kelley took only a life estate in the property, and that the fee therein is now vested in them, together with Charles M. Kelley, as heirs at law of Charles McAllister.

*419 . The progress of the case was interupted by various vicissitudes, including the death of many of the attorneys who were originally engaged on one side or the other. Several orders were passed in the cause from time to time, bringing in additional parties; and it is now stated in the record that all necessary and proper parties are before the Court. Several references were held in the course of the years for the taking of testimony, but the referee was not authorized to make any finding of fact or of law. The matter finally came on to be heard on February 1, 1937, before the Honorable Philip H. Stoll, Circuit Judge, who has filed his decree, holding that reformation of the deed should be ordered. He accordingly decreed that the deed be amended by adding after the name of the grantee, Charles Middleton Kelley, the words “and his heirs and assigns forever,” so as to vest the fee to the premises in Charles M. Kelley.

The heirs at law of Charles McAllister, other than Charles M. Kelley (who is now dead), have appealed from’the Circuit decree upon numerous exceptions, but the real issues are few.

By referring to the deed of Charles McAllister, it will be seen that he conveyed in terms a life estate unto his daughter, Sarah Margaret Kelley. The deed then provides “at her death the said plantation is to become the absolute property of my grandson, Charles Middleton Kelley,” and it concludes with this warranty: “I do hereby warrant and forever defend all and singular the said premises unto the said parties and against any person or persons whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same or any part thereof.”

Unquestionably, under our decisions, the only interest acquired under this deed by Charles Middleton Kelley was a life estate, and not an estate in fee simple, there being no limitation to heirs.

Under the technical rules of the common law in force in this State, and generally recognized throughout the United States except where abrogated or modi *420 fied by statute, it is essential to the creation Of an estate in fee simple in a natural person by a deed that there be in the deed an express limitation to such person and his heirs. Boyce v. Moseley, 102 S. C., 361, 86 S. E., 771; McMillan v. Hughes, 88 S. C., 296, 70 S. E., 804; McMichael v. McMichael, 51 S. C., 555, 29 S. E., 403; Jones v. Swearingen, 42 S. C., 58, 19 S. E., 947. As was said by this Court in Groce v. Benson, 168 S. C., 145, 167 S. E., 151, 153: “Section 8694, Civil Code, 1932, prescribes the form of deeds of conveyance of real estate for use in this State. In order to carry the fee, the conveyance must be to the grántee ‘his heirs and assigns forever. It was originally held in this State that, in order to devise real estate, the testamentary instrument must contain words of inheritance, as in a common-law deed. The Legislature by its Act of 1924 declared that it should no longer be necessary to insert words of inheritance in a will in order to carry the fee. In all the hundred years which have passed since the passage of that Act, the lawmaking body of the State have not seen fit to adopt similar legislation in regard to deeds. It is manifest that Courts should be cautious in enforcing a rule which in effect does that which the Legislature has not done.”

The respondent and the other defendant property owners insist, however, that they are entitled to a reformation of the deed so as to vest the fee in Charles Middleton Kelley, through mutuality of mistake, and urge upon us that the testimony taken in the cause supports this contention. The testimony, some of which is challenged upon the ground of being inadmissible, does not meet the requirements of the rule laid down by our Court and practically all other Courts, as a basis for reformation on this ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.E. 156, 185 S.C. 415, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gowdy-v-kelley-sc-1937.