Guignard v. Corley

144 S.E. 586, 147 S.C. 12, 62 A.L.R. 533, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 20, 1928
Docket12498
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 S.E. 586 (Guignard v. Corley) 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
Guignard v. Corley, 144 S.E. 586, 147 S.C. 12, 62 A.L.R. 533, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 143 (S.C. 1928).

Opinion

*14 The opinion of the Court was .delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This is an action for partition, instituted by the plaintiffs as the personal representatives of G. A. Guignard, deceased, under his will, against 29 defendants, alleged to be tenants in common with G. A. Guignard, of certain real estate situated in and near the Town of Cayce, in Lexington County. The principal defendant in the issues now presented is the Cáyce Land Company, between which company and G. A. Guignard there has heretofore been much litigation. See 124 S. C., 443; 117 S. E., 644; 131 S. C., 296; 127 S. E., 364; 135 S..C., 446; 134 S. E., 1; and 140 S. C., 497; 139 S. E., 145.

It appears that all points of controversy between the Guignard estate and the Cayce Land Company, and all points affecting the codefendants of the Cayce Land Company, have been settled by the previous decisions of this Court above referred to, and by the decree of his Honor, Judge Grimball, in the present action, except the respective contentions of the Guignard estate and the Cayce Land Company in regard to the two railroad tracks that have been laid by Guignard over parts of the property admittedly subject to partition. Upon the plat, reproduced at page 521 of the case of Cayce Land Co. v. Guignard, 135 S. C., 446; 134 S. E., 1, these two tracks are designated, respectively as “Guignard siding connecting with Southern Ry.,” and “Guignard R. R.” Eor convenience and to prevent confusion, they will be referred to as the Southern spur track and Seaboard spur track, for they are. both spur tracks rather than side trades.

The Southern spur track was constructed by Guignard at his own expense in 1909 under a license agreement with the Southern Railway Company, in order to secure a connecting line from his brickyard on the north side of the Southern Railway, to that railroad. It led from a switch, giving a physical connection with the railroad across the *15 railway company’s right of way, and across a certain strip of land lying between the northern limit of the right of way and the line of the Moseley'estate and other land belonging to Guignard, on to the brickyard. This strip of land has been designated as the “segment,” for the reason that it lies between the north line of the railway company’s right of way, which is on a curve, as the “arc” of a theoretical circle, and the property line of the Moseley estate and of Guignard as the “chord”; it is about 900 feet long, and about 30 feet wide at the widest point, containing four-tenths of an acre. The track extends for about 50 feet over and across this segment.

It has been decided by this Court, on the appeal reported in 135 S. C., 446; 134 S. E., 1, that the railway company was within its rights in granting to Guignard a license of a right of way, over its right of way, between the switch connection and the north line of its right of way, that such license did not constitute an additional servitude, but that, so far as the construction of the track over the segment was concerned, Guignard was a trespasser ab initio. It was said :

“Guignard was mistaken in the extent of land covered by his contract with B. B. Cayce, and as to this strip he was a trespasser upon land which belonged, after the termination of the fee defeasible, tO' the executory devisees and their successors in title.”

In other words, it appeared from the Tomlinson survey that, even if B. B. Cayce had formally executed a deed to Guignard covering the fee to the 3½ acres included in the railway company’s right of way, the segment was not included within it, and that as to< it he had never had even color of title. He was recjuired to, and did account for the rental value of that part of the segment occupied by him.

The Seaboard spur track was constructed by Guignard, in 1909, under a contract with the receivers of the Seaboard Air Tine Railway Company, and under a license of the *16 Southern Railway Company, to obtain a way by which he could haul by rail clay from a pit on the south side of both railroad main lines, to his brickyard on the north side, and also by which he could haul brick and other freight to and from the brickyard and the Seaboard’s station at Cayce. It led from the track of the Seaboard, south of the Southern’s track, crossing the right of way of the Southern by an underpass, constructed by license of the Southern, crossing the segment hereinbefore referred to, and proceeding over land of Guignard, to the brickyard. The track extends about 10 feet over and across the segment.

It has been decided by this Court in the appeal reported in 135 S. C., 446; 134 S. E., 1, that the Southern had no right to grant a license to Guignard for,the construction of this spur track over its right of way, that it constituted an additional servitude, for the occupation of which by Guignard he was accountable, and that, so far as its construction over the segment was concerned, Guignard was a trespasser ab initio, as in the case of the Southern spur track. He was required to, and did, account for the rental value of that part of the track upon both the right of way and the segment occupied by him.

This appeal concerns the respective rights of the Guignard estate and the Cayce Rand Company to the strip' of land covered by the Southern spur track, over and across the segment, and the strip of land covered by the Seaboard spur track, over and across the right of way of the Southern Railway Company, and over and across the segment.

The special Referee, to whom the matter was referred, filed an interesting and elaborate report. Upon the questions at issue upon this appeal, he recommended that, as the area covered by the two' spur tracks was less than the distributive share of the Guignard estate, as a tenant in common of the 135 acres subject to partition, the strips of land occupied by the two spur tracks be allotted to the Guignard estate, upon condition that, in consideration of the improve *17 ments thereon, they pay to the Cayce Land Company the sum of $6,978 for equality of partition. He arrived at this figure by estimating the cost and value of the improvements at $7,050, and the interest of the Cayce Land Company therein, at 215/216 of $7,050 — $6,978 ($7,017.37?)

Upon exceptions to the Referee’s report, his Llonor sustained the report as to the allotment of the strips to the Guignards, but reversed it as to the payment of the assessment for equality of partition, sustaining the contention of the Guignards that they were entitled to the allotment without the assessment, and overruling the contention of the Cayce Land Company that the assessment should have been greater. The land company made an offer of $20,000 for the strips, and insisted that they should be put up for sale at that initial bid.

From the decree, the Cayce Land Company has appealed upon exceptions which fairly present the questions hereinafter discussed.

It is important to observe that, at the time Guignard constructed the two spur tracks, he had no title to either the

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.E. 586, 147 S.C. 12, 62 A.L.R. 533, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guignard-v-corley-sc-1928.