Johnson v. Payne

19 S.C.L. 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1833
StatusPublished

This text of 19 S.C.L. 111 (Johnson v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Payne, 19 S.C.L. 111 (S.C. Ct. App. 1833).

Opinion

O-’Neall J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

-n , • , . - ¶ h rom trie view winch Í take of this case, it will he necessary to acertain, 1st, What title David son, the lessor of the defendant, has to the land, upon which the defendant has entered? and 2nd, If his tie is that of tenant in common with the plaintiff, has there been an actual ouster established by the ver-fl i r* f nf til f» i n nr ? uiot ox ine juiy r

1st It appears that Molly Rogers, the owner of the land, died intestate, leaving no issue, but nine brothers and sisters, her only heirs and next of kin.' The plaintiff is one of the sisters, and Joshua Johnson, one of the brothers of the intestate. At the sale of her personal estate, the land was sold by the verbal consent it is said of all interested; at that sale. Joshua [112]*112Johnson became the purchaser. After some time the and one of her sisters, filed a bill in the Court of Equity, for an account of Joshua’s administration °f the personal estate, and also for partition and an account of the rents and profits of the land. To that bill, Joshua answered relying on the sale made by the verbal consent of the parties. The case was referred the commissioner, who re ported a large sum due to the complainants, as well for their shares oí the personal estate, as for their shares of the proceeds of the of the land. The Court by a decretal order dithe commissioner to convey to Samuel Johnson, all the interest which Molly Rogers had in the -, i , . land, or to any person to whom he might direct the conveyance to be made. The namee‘Samuel”'was ob-vi°usly inserted by mistake instead of Joshua, andat December Term, 1831 of the Court of Appeals, the was corrected* The complainants issued their execution for the amount, reported in their favor, and lodged it in the sheriff’s office on the 10th °**'Sent&ihber, 1827: elder executions, at the suit of Da^SHficharclson and Francis H. Wardlaw, against Johns’off,, were also in the sheriff’s office. All tfie^e'-ííxecutiohs <vere perhaps levied on the land, which was sb'ld under Richardson’s and Wardlaw’s ex-e*ci!<tipns, as the property of Joshua Johnson, and pur-David Riehardson for $53 ; and on the 1st December, 1828, the sheriff conveyed in the usual fornf'tlie land to him. The plaintiff and her sister received no part of the proceeds of the sale of the land. The plaintiff was in the actual possession of part of the land, and the defendant as tenant of Richardson, took possession of the field which she had cultivated the preceding year, and cut down and inclosed about four acres of the woodland. For this trespass, the action was brought. Pending this action, on the 12th of April 1832, the commissioner conveyed to Joshua Johnson, under the decretal order as corrected by the Court of Appeals, the interest which Molly Rogers had in the land.

From this statement of the facts, I think it is de[113]*113monstrable, that Richardson took the interest of Joshua Johnson, as one of the heirs of Molly Rogers in the land, by virtue of his purchase at sheriff’s sale, and that this was all which he acquired. Upon the death of the intestate, her land descended to her heirs, and their interest in it was a legal, not an equitable estate. It is true, this estate might have been defeated by her debts, if she had owed any; or it might have been ended and determined by a sale or assignment in partition. But until divested in some one of these ways, Joshua Johnson had a legal estate in one-ninth of the whole land: This was liable to seizure and sale, under execution. The case of Rabb v. Aiken, 2 M’C. C. R. 118, does not militate against this position. In that case, the land had been assigned in proceedings in partition to three of the heirs, and a sum assessed and directed to be paid to Robert Rabb, whose interest was, subsequent to the judgment in partition seized in, and sold under execution, and purchased by Aiken. It was obvious, that the interest oj^¡4übert Rabb as one of the heirs of his infest was ended and determined by the, tition, and that of course the p acquire any title to the land; an ' the Court intended to go in dec! If the interest of Joshua Johnson liable to seizure and sale under exed can be no doubt, that the sheriff sale of, the whole tract, under executions against Joshua Johnson, would pass, whatever interest he had in it, to the purchaser. For it is the defendant’s legal'interest and estate in the land, (be it in se-veralty, or in common) which the sheriff can sell and convey under execution. A levy on, and sale and conveyance of, the whole tract of land was, in legal contemplation, a levy on, and sale and conveyance of, all the interest and estate of Joshua Johnson, in it: and these are the precise terms of the sheriff’s deed. The purchaser, Richardson, under the sheriff’s deed, was entitled to one-ninth of the whole tract, the distributive share of Joshua Johnson, as one of the [114]*114heirs of Molly Rogers, deceased. Did he acquire also, by his deed, any other or greater interest ? I think not. For if all the heirs of Molly Rogers, had been parties to the bill in which the decretal order directed a conveyance to be made to Joshua Johnson,, still, until it was executed, he had no legal estate in the landbeyond the one-ninth to which he was entitled as heir atlaw. Until executed, his right to the land was a mere equity, and as such, was not liable to execution. For if the proceedings in the case in Equity, be regarded as an assignment by the decree of the Court in partition to one of the heirs of the whole land, on the payment of a sum assessed in favor of the other parties, then, according to the act of ’91, the estate would not vest in Joshua Johnson, until the payment of the consideration money. (2 Brev. 103.) And 1 am disposed to think that under the decrétal order, the Court would have held the commissioner justified in refusing to execute the title, upon returning the fact, that the consideration money had not been paid. The decree, however imperative in its terms, is nothing more than an authority to the commissioner to execute the conveyance; for this act he is the agent of the Court, as well as of the parties, and whatever would prevent the Court from decreeing the estate to be absolutely vested, would authorize him, on being informed of the fact, to refuse to execute the title. But if the decree is to be regarded as directing a title to be made, in consequence of a sale, for partition, then, and in that case, the land by the act of ’91 is declared to stand “ pledged for the payment of the purchase money.” (2 Brev. 103—4.) If, after the decree directing titles, but before the execution of the conveyance, it was ascertained that a conveyance would endanger the rights of the distributees to payment, in such a case, I think the commissioner might have refused to execute the title, until the purchase money was paid, and that the Court would have held him justified.— These views shew that Joshua Johnson, under the decretal order, had not, and could not have a legal estate, until the commissioner conveyed to him in pur-[115]*115nuance of the decree. This was not done at the time the sale took place. The subsequent deed of the •commissioner to Joshua Johnson cannot (if it has any legal effect) enure to Richardson’s benefit, so as .to perfect his title to the whole tract.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.C.L. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-payne-scctapp-1833.