Green v. Green

27 S.E. 952, 50 S.C. 514, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 S.E. 952 (Green v. Green) 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
Green v. Green, 27 S.E. 952, 50 S.C. 514, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 46 (S.C. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

This action was commenced on the 28th May, 1896, in the Court of Common Pleas for Rich-land County. The complaint alleged in substance: In first paragraph: That Lucy P. Green, widow, late of the city of Columbia, in this State, departed this life on the 6th day of August, 1864, leaving of force her last will and testament, whereby, in the first item thereof, she devised as follows: “1st. I devise and bequeath to my daughter, Lucy J. Green, my house and lot in Columbia, my present residence, together with all the furniture and things appurtenant in the house and kitchen. The lot contains one acre and a . half, and is separated by a fence from my adjoining lot. This devise is made to her for life, for her sole and separate use, not subject to debts, contracts or control of any husband with whom she may intermarry. At her death, I devise and bequeath the same to my four sons, Allen J. Green, Halcott P. Green, Frederick L. Green, and John S. Green, and the children of my daughter Lucy, if she should have any living at her death, they taking among them one share; if she leaves none living at her death, then to my four sons.” 2. That the defendant, Lucy J. Green (who is the devisee for life named in said will), immediately after the death of said testatrix, took possession of the said lot of land, and in person or by her tenants occupied the [520]*520dwelling house thereon until its destruction by fire in the year 1878. 3. That prior to said fire, the said Lucy J. Green, the life tenant, had caused said dwelling house to be insured against fire, and the said fire having occurred while the said policy or policies of insurance were in force, the said Lucy J. Green received, early in 1878, under said policy or policies, and on account of said loss by fire, the sum of $3,000, which was paid to her by the insurance company or companies which had underwritten such policy or policies. 4. That no portion of the insurance money so received by the said Lucy J. Green on account of the loss by fire of the dwelling house on the lot of which she was life tenant under her mother’s said will was used in rebuilding on said lot of land so held by Lucy J. Green for life; but, though said money was held by her in trust for the remaindermen under her mother’s said will, it was wholly used by her in the purchase of a tract of land in and near the city of Columbia, known as the brick yard tract, containing 418 acres, more or less, and hereinafter more particularly described; and was further used in the purchase of one acre of land at the northeast corner of Pendleton and Bull streets, in the city of Columbia, S. C., bounded north by the life estate lot first above described, and east by Amy Taylor’s; that other moneys used by said Lucy J. Green in making said purchase, with perhaps some inconsiderable exception, was obtained by her by borrowing the sum of $2,000 on the security of a mortgage of the said “Brick Yard Tract,” which was afterwards paid off and satisfied out of the proceeds of sale of said brick yard tract, made by her in the year 1891. 5. That on the 6th January, 1879, the said Lucy J. Green purchased at judicial sale the said brick yard tract for the sum of $2,500, and received title deed thereto, and all the money paid by her on account of such purchase was received by her on account of said fire insurance and said loan, and was applied to a first mortgage covering said brick yard tract, to costs and expenses of sale, and to a second mortgage and costs which had been [521]*521previously purchased by her with a portion of the said insurance money. 6. That on the 2d of February, 1880, the said Huey J. Green purchased at sheriff’s sale the said one -acre lot at the corner of Pendleton and Bull streets, in Columbia, S. C., for the sum of $590, and received a title thereto. A large portion of the purchase money of this lot of-land was applied to the judgment of Scott & Son against John S. Green, which had been purchased by said Huey J. Green in March, 1878, and under which said land was sold; and the money used in making the purchase of said lot of land, as also in the purchase of the said judgment, was derived from the same sources as stated in paragraph 4, supra. 7. On January 2, 1891, the said Huey J. Green sold the said brick yard tract of 418 acres, more or less, and now bounded by S. A. Pearce on the north, east by J. M. Graham and others, south by Sallie Taylor, and west by Congaree River, for $40,000, $10,000 whereof was received in cash-, and $30,000 whereof was seeured by bond of the purchaser and a mortgage of the premises. No part of the principal of said bond and mortgage has been paid, and is still held by the said Huey J. Green, and is claimed by her as her absolute property. 8. That with the $10,000 received by Huey J. Green in cash, she paid off the mortgage debt of $2,000 contracted in January, 1879, and she caused to be erected two dwelling houses on the one acre lot above mentioned, at the corner of Pendleton and Bull streets. The one nearest the corner is now occupied by Miss Green, and the other dwelling house so erected, together with lot on which it stands, measuring sixty feet on Pendleton street by 196 feet in depth (being the eastern side of the acre lot purchased by her under the Scott judgment as aforesaid), she conveyed in fee simple, on June 16,1892, on the consideration of love and affection alone to the defendant, Halcott P. Green, in trust for Mrs. Sallie C. Heyward for life, with remainder to the defendant, Huey P. Heyward, and her issue, or in default of such issue, then to the defendant, Nathaniel B. Heyward, in fee. 9. That the said insurance money having been re[522]*522ceived by the said Lucy J. Green in trust for herself for life, and then for the remaindermen of the property, the loss of which by fire the said insurance -money was paid to reimburse, and having been used by her in acquiring the said brick yard tract and city one acre lot, and the said brick yard tract having been by her converted into cash and bond and mortgage, and said cash having been used in the improvement of said city acre lot, and the conveyance to H. P. Green in trust for Mrs. Heyward and others having been without any valuable consideration, the said Lucy J. Green now holds said bond and mortgage of $30,000, and her dwelling house with the lot on which it stands, bounded east by the lot conveyed to H. P. Green, trustee, in trust for herself for life, and then for the remainders declared in the first item of her mother’s will, and the said Halcott P. Green holds the said Heyward lot in trust for the persons named in the deed appointing him trustee, but only for the lifetime of said Lucy J. Green, and then in trust for the remainders declared in the first item of Mrs. Lucy P. Green’s will as aforesaid. 10. That the said Lucy J. Green has declared her intention of disposing of the house and lot now occupied by her, and of the bond and mortgage aforesaid held by her, as if the same belonged to her in fee, and in disregard of the rights which attach to this property by virtue of the will of Mrs. Lucy P. Green, and the law of, the land touching the proceeds of insurance received by a life tenant from houses of the life tenant burned by fire; and so believing and intending, the said property, now held by her in trust for herself for life, with remainder to the heirs and proper representatives of her four deceased brothers, may be lost to the remaindermen unless prevented by the restraining order of this Court. 11. That since the burning of the dwelling house of the late Mrs. Lucy P. Green in 1878, her four sons have ^11 died — the said Lucy J. Green surviving, ' but unmarried.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E. 952, 50 S.C. 514, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-green-sc-1897.