HUXFIELD CEMETERY ASS'N v. Elliott

698 S.E.2d 591, 388 S.C. 565, 2010 S.C. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 16, 2010
Docket26866
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 698 S.E.2d 591 (HUXFIELD CEMETERY ASS'N v. Elliott) 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
HUXFIELD CEMETERY ASS'N v. Elliott, 698 S.E.2d 591, 388 S.C. 565, 2010 S.C. LEXIS 295 (S.C. 2010).

Opinion

Justice KITTREDGE.

This case concerns a three-acre tract of land known as Huxfield Cemetery and which party, Appellant or Respondents, may maintain control over the property. The special referee treated this dispute as an action to try title and ruled that because Respondents had superior title over Appellant, Respondents were entitled to maintain control over the cemetery and were permitted to charge a burial fee. We reverse the special referee’s order and hold Appellant has the right to maintain and control Huxfield Cemetery.

I.

In 1881, William Rowe conveyed a 500 acre tract of land to Samuel Wall by deed, excepting out “three acres near Carvers Bay Known as the Huxfield Graveyard to be used as a Public *568 Burying Ground.” From 1881 through 1999, Mount Zion Church managed and maintained the land and used it, without challenge, as a cemetery for its members. In 1999, at the request of the pastor for Mount Zion, who no longer wished to maintain separate accounts, an association of relatives and descendants of those buried in the cemetery assumed responsibility for collecting and accounting for donations made towards Huxfield Cemetery.

In March 2006, Respondent Bobby L. Elliott sent a letter to local funeral homes stating that as the heirs of R.L. Elliott, they were the owners of Huxfield Cemetery and would begin charging $500 per burial plot. In response, the association of relatives formally incorporated as Appellant Huxfield Cemetery Association for the purpose of preserving Huxfield Cemetery as a public burial ground. Appellant filed its articles of incorporation with the Secretary of State and designated Baylis E. Elliott as its registered agent and president. 1 Mount Zion issued a quit claim deed to Appellant transferring any property rights it had in Huxfield Cemetery. In 2007, Appellant filed a declaratory judgment action seeking an order declaring the rights of the parties with respect to Huxfield Cemetery.

At trial, Appellant presented Renee Dean, a real estate paralegal, as an expert in the field of title examination and abstract preparation to testify as to the chain of title. Dean testified that William Rowe transferred the deed conveying 500 acres, but carving out the three acre tract for Huxfield Cemetery, to Samuel Wall; Wall transferred the property to Thomas Cribb; Cribb transferred the property to W.F. Elliott; W.F. Elliott died intestate, and in 1893, the land was partitioned. Jacob Elliott obtained title to a portion of the partitioned tract that surrounds Huxfield Cemetery.

In 1944, Jacob Elliott conveyed the property to Susan Elliott. The next filing found with regard to this property was a “1956 map of 148 acres surveyed for the Estate of Susan Elliott.” 2 Following Susan Elliott’s death, her heirs brought *569 a partition suit in which a 1961 map was filed. The 1961 map divided Susan Elliott’s property into four tracts. Huxfield Cemetery is shown as a separate parcel, but Tract One surrounds it. Tract One was conveyed to R.L. Elliott. In 1978, a plat was recorded stating it was a “map of 2.25 acres of land in tax district no. 3 on which a cemetery is located— owned by R.L. Elliott.” In 1995, R.L. Elliott issued a deed of distribution to Mary C. Elliott and Respondents conveying certain property including “The tract shown as CEMETERY on that” 1961 map. Mount Zion is not mentioned or referenced in the chain of title.

In addition to Dean’s testimony, Appellant called Cyrus Snowden, who testified his mother served as the secretary/treasurer of Mount Zion. Snowden presented checks from 1964 and 1973 reflecting funds from Mount Zion’s account that were used to maintain Huxfield Cemetery. Baylis Elliott testified he helped clean the cemetery from the time he was a child and was reimbursed by Mount Zion for his efforts. On cross-examination, Baylis admitted he, on behalf of Mount Zion, retained a lawyer in 1990 when they learned R.L. Elliott claimed he owned the property. The lawyer sent a letter to R.L. Elliott, in which the lawyer stated he was aware R.L. Elliott obtained title to Huxfield Cemetery following the partition suit of Susan Elliott’s estate and requested a quit claim deed to Huxfield Cemetery. Baylis also admitted requesting Respondents’ permission to erect a marker honoring Confederate veterans.

Although Respondents did not present any witnesses or introduce any evidence, the special referee ruled in their favor. The special referee first found this was an action to try title and that Huxfield Cemetery was a public burial ground. He found several statutes of limitations provided Respondents a defense to Appellant’s claim including S.C.Code Ann. §§ 15-3-340, 350, 380 and 15-67-210, 220. The special referee found that because Respondents had established possession of the land under color of title, the burden shifted to Appellant to prove a claim to title, which Appellant failed to prove. See Cummings v. Varn, 307 S.C. 37, 41, 413 S.E.2d 829, 832 (1992) (holding the defendant in actual possession is regarded as the rightful owner until plaintiff proves perfect title and the plaintiff must recover on strength of his title, not the weak *570 ness of the defendant’s title). Accordingly, the special referee ruled “Huxfield Cemetery is a public burial ground and shall remain so in perpetuity” and that Respdndents were entitled to maintain control of Huxfield Cemetery and charge a burial fee.

II.

In our view, the special referee’s order is based on an error of law. We begin with the parties’ steadfast stipulation, which forms the basis for this litigation: the property was dedicated to the public in 1881 to be used as a public burying ground and the property may not (and will not) be used for any other purposes. Because this land is a cemetery, traditional property laws are not applicable. See 14 Am.Jur.2d Cemeteries § 2 (“A cemetery is not subject to the laws of ordinary property.”). Thus, an overview of property laws governing cemeteries is instructive.

Land may be dedicated to the public for cemetery purposes and no particular form or ceremony is required to accomplish such a dedication. 14 Am.Jur.2d Cemeteries § 17. “The intention of the owner of the land to dedicate it for a public cemetery, together with the acceptance and use of the same by the public, or the consent and acquiescence of the owner in the long-continued use of his or her lands for such purpose, are sufficient.” Id. This principle of law on public cemetery dedications mirrors our case law on all types of public dedications. See Tupper v. Dorchester County, 326 S.C. 318, 487 S.E.2d 187 (1997) (holding in order to effectuate a public dedication, the owner must express in a positive and unmistakable manner the intention to dedicate his property to public use and there must be acceptance of such property by the public).

A public dedication will either be a statutory dedication or a common-law dedication.

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Bluebook (online)
698 S.E.2d 591, 388 S.C. 565, 2010 S.C. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huxfield-cemetery-assn-v-elliott-sc-2010.