Harrelson v. Sarvis

17 S.E. 368, 39 S.C. 14, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 31, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 368 (Harrelson v. Sarvis) 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
Harrelson v. Sarvis, 17 S.E. 368, 39 S.C. 14, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 100 (S.C. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

This was an action to recover a tract of land (300 acres) in the county of Horry. The answer of the defendants did not state under what title they claimed, but put in a general denial, alleging adverse possession by themselves and their ancestors more than twenty years, under [16]*16claim of title, and interposing the statute of limitations. After the plaintiff closed her testimony, the judge granted a non-suit in general terms, because “the plaintiff' had failed to make out her chain of title to the premises in question.”- That makes it necessary to consider all the testimony, in order to find out whether any error was committed. No “Case” was regularly “stated;” but the record shows that the plaintiff offered in evidence the following “abstract of title:”

1. Certified copy of plat of laud surveyed for John Sarvis, September 25, 1792 (eleven hundred acres).

2. Fee simple deed, Abram King to Benjamin Dorman, January 28th, 1822, for one hundred acres of land, being part of a tract granted to John Sarvis, sr., March 4, 1793, covering the land in question.

3. Fee simple deed, Benjamin Dorman to Thomas Dorman, dated February 20,1843, for same land as that described in No. “2,” above.

4. Fee simple deed, Thomas Dorman and wife to J. T. Moody, December 2, 1859, for three hundred acres, covering the land described in Nos. 2 and 3 above, being part of land granted to John Sarvis, sr., March 4, 1793.

5. Deed J. T. Moody to D. J. Blanton, July 27, 1861, for same land as that described in No. 4 above. See Appendix A — deed without the word “heirs.”

6. Deed purporting in its premises to be from ihe widow and two children of J. T. Moody, deceased, to plaintiff for their interest in the land described in No. 5 above, but executed by the two children only, for a copy of which, except description of land, December 30, 1890, see Appendix B.

7. Deed Isaac G. Long, probate judge Horry County, to heirs at law of D. J. Blanton, of whom plaintiff is one, based upon the partition proceedings of the 300 acre tract- of land of the estate of D. J. Blanton, described in Nos. 4 and 5, this paper being the final order in partition of said estate, and in which the. land in question is set apart to the plaintiff in fee simple, February 3d, 1878. See Appendix C.

8. Submission to, and award of, arbitrators in a controversy between Celia Harrelson, widow, and heirs at law of D. J. [17]*17Blanton and W. P. Pridgeon, as to the location of a certain line of the land in question, in which the line as now claimed was established, June 10, 1882.

In addition to the foregoing, the plaintiff proved her actual possession of the premises for more than twelve years next prior to the commencement of the action under title, and the actual possession of D. J. Blanton, her ancestor, and his heirs under deed of J. T. Moody, from 1861 down to the time of her entry under proceedings in partition in 1878; also, the actual possession of Benjamin Dorman and Thomas Dorman during the terms indicated by their deeds respectively, from 1822 to 1859, and the possession and use by Moody during the term indicated by his deed, and the trespass and ouster as alleged in the complaint, defining the scene of trespass and the extent of her claim by reference to the plat attached. The plaintiff also proved the death of D. J. Blanton about the close of the Confederate war, the loss or displacement of the records of partition in the Probate Court, and also loss or displacement of records of Circuit Court in proceedings to confirm said partition. Also, actual personal notice to the defendant not to enter upon the-land in question.

The plaintiff then closed, and the defendants moved for a non-suit on the ground that the plaintiff had not shown perfect title in' three particulars, to wit: (1) In that the deed from J. T. Moody to plaintiff’s father, D. J. Blanton, under whom she claims, contains no words of inheritance, and vested in him only a life estate, and plaintiff or any one of his heirs at law took nothing by descent. (2) That if that objection can not be sustained, then in that there had been no proof of the recitals in the deed of the probate judge (No. 7) as to decree of Probate Court and other proceedings therein, and no proof of any proceedings in the Circuit Court to confirm the Probate Court proceedings, and that the probate judge’s deed is governed by the same rule, as to proof, as sheriff’s deeds. (3) In that plaintiff’s complaint alleges that she has title to the entire tract of land in question, whereas the title of James A. Moody and Bessie Bryan (No. 6) to plaintiff, in its premises purporting to be from three heirs at law of J. T. Moody, was, in fact, exe[18]*18cuted by two only; and in so far as it affects plaintiff’s claim, vests in her only a two-thirds interest, if anything, aud under her pleadings she can not recover.

The presiding judge held that either of the three grounds urged above on motion for non-suit would be fatal to plaintiff’s recovery, and granted an order of non-suit generally “for failure of proof of perfect title as was incumbent upon her under the pleadings.” The plaintiff appealed, contesting each of the grounds relied upon to support the non suit; but as they are long aud cover substantially the same points as above indicated, and are printed in the record, they need not be set out here.

1 It is certainly true, that in an action for the recovery of land, the plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his own title and not the weakness of that of his adversary. But it is not necessary that, under all circumstances, there should be an unbroken chain of paper title back to the grant. The statute of limitations has a double aspect; besides affording a shield of defence, it may, under certain circumstances, give title capable of being asserted actively. As was said by Judge Earle in Young v. Watson, 1 McMull., 449, cited with approbation in the case of Geiger v. Kaigler, 15 S. C., 273: “A plaintiff can only make out a perfect title by producing a grant, or by proving such a possession as will give title in himself, or in some one from whom he derives title.” The same view is taken in 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. L., 643: “Where property, whether real or personal, is held adversely, the statute operates on the title, and when the bar is complete, the title of the original owner is defeated, and the adverse possessor has the complete title.”

2 Now, did the plaintiff have legal title to the premises in question or any part of them? Let us first consider the effect of the deed (No. 5) from J. T. Moody to D. J. Blanton, of February 27, 1861. If that deed had conveyed to the grantee an inheritable interest, there can be no doubt that the plaintiff would have had paper title to the whole land, for she has conveyances from the other heirs at law of her father, T). J. Blanton. That deed was evidently written by an illiterate person, who probably did not know [19]*19the meaning of the word “heirs,” or the necessity of putting it in the deed. I have a very strong impression that the parties intended the deed to convey the fee simple, and words of inheritance were omitted from sheer ignorance; but the rule requiring the insertion of the word “heirs” in a deed, has been so long established, that we will not now undertake to review the numerous eases cited by the learned counsel for plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 368, 39 S.C. 14, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrelson-v-sarvis-sc-1893.