Jones v. A. H. Williams & Co.

72 S.E. 546, 89 S.C. 574, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 7, 1911
Docket8027
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 S.E. 546 (Jones v. A. H. Williams & Co.) 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
Jones v. A. H. Williams & Co., 72 S.E. 546, 89 S.C. 574, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 318 (S.C. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*576 Mr. Chief Justice Jones.

This is an action seeking the specific performance of a contract, between the plaintiff Ella E. Jones and the defendant C. M. Kelly, for the conveyance of a certain lot of land belonging at the time of the contract to the defendant, Kelly, in exchange for a certain other lot of land alleged to belong to the plaintiff. A. H. Williams & Co. were made parties defendant as the grantees of the same lot in question, the allegation being that the said A. H. Williams & Co. had accepted a deed for the said premises, with notice and knowledge of the contract between Kelly and the plaintiff. For what purpose or with what object the defendant Hall was made a party does not appear from the record other than is shown by the statement that he acted as agent for the defendant Kelly in making the sale of the said lot to his codefendants A. H. Williams & Co.

The cause was heard by Judge D. A. Townsend who made a decree January 22, 1903, adjudging that a valid contract had been made between the plaintiff and the defendant Kelly for the exchange and conveyance of the said lots respectively by each to the other, that the defendants A. H. Williams & Co. had accepted with notice of the rights of the plaintiff, a conveyance from the defendant Kelly of the lot contracted by the latter to be conveyed to the plaintiff, adjudging that plaintiff is entitled to specific performance of the contract and directing that defendant Kelly make good and sufficient title to plaintiff for said lot, “on her making good and sufficient title to him, C. M. Kelly, to her lot, the lot last described in the complaint.” But by the terms of the said decree, Judge Townsend expressly declined to pass upon the question as to whether the plaintiff could make a good and sufficient title to her lot, declaring that he would not then “pass upon the validity of plaintiff’s title, because it has not been brought into Court and because it may be necessary that testimony be taken respecting its validity.” By the same decree it was further directed that *577 the plaintiff should file her proposed deed for her lot with the clerk of said Court, within a time fixed, deed to remain in the custody of clerk “until the further order of this Court,” and the defendants were required within a period named to notify their acceptance or rejection of such title so tendered, “and if they refuse said deed, the grounds of refusal shall be served along with the notice.”

Leave was also therein granted to any party to apply to the Court or to a Judge at chambers “for such further orders as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this decree.” The decree further declared “that the deed of conveyance of the lot in question from C. M. Kelly to A. H. Williams & Co. be and is hereby cancelled and annulled,” but it is apparent from the general tenor and terms of the decree as a whole that this pronouncement of the decree was predicated entirely upon the right of the plaintiff to a specific performance, and that this latter right was held to 'be dependent upon her ultimate ability “to make good, sufficient title to her lot” which she had contracted to convey in exchange. No adjudication appears to have been made by this decree of any rights or equities existing between the defendants C. M. Kelly and A. H. Williams & Co., arising out of the sale and conveyance of the Kelly lot by the former to the latter.

In compliance with the requirements of that decree, the plaintiff filed her proposed deed and the defendants in due time served a notice of refusal to accept the deed, accompanying the same with statement of certain grounds for such refusal, setting up alleged defects in the title of the plaintiff to the lot, objecting that the deed should be made to defendants A. H. Williams & Co., and not to defendant, C. M. Kelly, and reserving or attempting to reserve the right “to add further grounds of refusal, if any be. discovered.” A notice by defendant of intention to appeal from the decree of Judge Townsend was duly served, but the appeal was afterwards formally abandoned.

*578 On October 11, 1905, by consent of all parties, an order of reference was made “to take the testimony upon the objections of defendants to accepting plaintiff’s deed of conveyance;” but nó further proceedings were thereafter had in the cause until the year 1910. It appears, however, from the letters and affidavits in the record, that, during this interval, some efforts looking to a settlement of the matter in controversy out of Court were made by the counsel for the plaintiff upon the one hand and the defendants Williams & Co. upon the other.

Some attempt having been made or negotiations begun between the plaintiff and the defendant C. M. Kelly for an exchange of deeds for the lots in question, out of Court and in disregard of any rights of A. H. Williams & Co., on the 25th of April, 1910, upon the motion of the defendants last named, a temporary restraining order to preserve the status was granted by Judge Wilson, and a rule issued requiring the plaintiff and the defendant C. M. Kelly to show cause why an injunction against the execution and delivery by the one to the other of them of any deeds for the lots in question should not be continued until the filial decree in this suit. Upon hearing the return to this rule, and the affidavits in support of and against the granting of such injunction, which affidavits set forth substantially the facts arid proceedings already recited, Judge Wilson granted an order continuing in full force the injunction against the exception of the deeds until the further order of the Court, requiring the execution of a proper^ injunction bond by the defendants, A. H. Williams & Co. Upon the same day May 11, 1910, this order was granted, an order was made with the consent of the attorneys for all parties, substituting a new referee instead of the one named in the order of October 11, 1905, already mentioned.

Thereafter, on August 4, 1910, upon due notice, and upon affidavits made by the defendants who are members of the firm of A. H. Williams & Co. and by the attorneys repre *579 sehting the said defendants, an order was made by Judge Wilson allowing the said defendants to amend the notice and grounds of refusal to accept the deed filed by plaintiff in pursuance of the decree of Judge Townsend already mentioned, the amendment so granted being the addition of an objection that such deed could not operate to convey a good title, for the reason avered that said plaintiff was and is seized merely of an estate for the life of another in the said premises and was and is not seized of a fee simple title therein. In support of the motion of such leave to amend affidavits as stated were submitted to the general purport that the said defendants Williams & Co. had been misled by the acts, conduct and assurances of the defendant C. M. Kelly into the belief that he was defending in this action the title which he had executed to the said defendants Williams & Co. that the change of attitude of the defendant C. M.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jones v. Williams
89 S.E. 465 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 S.E. 546, 89 S.C. 574, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-a-h-williams-co-sc-1911.