Kennedy v. Roundtree

37 S.E. 942, 59 S.C. 324
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 37 S.E. 942 (Kennedy v. Roundtree) 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
Kennedy v. Roundtree, 37 S.E. 942, 59 S.C. 324 (S.C. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

The record contains the following statement, to wit: “The four above cases were commenced by the service of the summons and complaint on the 10th day of February, 1899, and were heard together upon the pleadings and testimony reported by the master, a jury trial having been waived. Each of the said cases were for the recovery of real estate. The complaint and answer are the same in each case except the description of the land. The plaintiffs and defendants claim from the same source of title, to wit: from Allen J. Weathersbee. The plaintiff claims under a deed from P. H. Creech, sheriff, who sold land described in the complaint under execution issued out of the Court of Common Pleas, under a judgment of the Court of *326 Common Pleas entitled W. H. Kennedy v. J. Allen Weathersbee. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that no levy had been shown upon the execution relied on to support the sale, and also upon the further ground that the deed from the sheriff to the plaintiff did not have any U. S. revenue stamps upon it. The Judge sustained the first ground, but overruled the second ground of nonsuit.

1 The plaintiff appealed upon the following exception: “i. Because his Honor, Judge Gage, erred in holding that no levy had been shown upon the execution relied upon h> support the sale; whereas, his Honor should have held that the testimony of the sheriff and the levy set out upon the schedule annexed to the execution and the recitals in the sheriff’s deed, were sufficient proof that a levy had been made, and a sufficient compliance with the statute requiring the levy to be indorsed upon the execution or upon a schedule thereto annexed.” The judgment and execution in the case of W. H. Kennedy against Allen J. Weathersbee were introduced in evidence; also, the following instrument of writing, which will hereinafter be explained by the testimony of the sheriff, to wit: “W. H. Kennedy v. A. J. Weathersbee. By virtue of the above execution, I have levied upon and will sell at Barnwell C. H., on Monday, the 2d day of January, 1899, during the usual hours of sale, to the highest bidder for cash, the following real estate, to wit: One tract of land, containing 240 acres, more or less, known as the Wall place, bounded by lands of James Simmons, W. W. Harley, Mrs. Williams and the estate of Jacob Holman. (Then follows a description of four tracts of land, including the land in dispute.) Levied upon as the property of A. J. Weathersbee to satisfy execution and cost lodged in my office in favor of W. H. Kennedy. Terms cash, purchaser to pay for papers. Frank H. Creech, Sheriff Barnwell County. Sheriff’s office, December 10th, 1898.” The following is an extract from the testimony of Frank H. Creech, sheriff: “Q. I hand you the original execution in that case, *327 marked exhibit C. Please state if you made any levy under that execution, when you made them, and what you levied upon? (Question objected to.) A. This was the original execution filed in my office December i, 1898, and entered in execution book, page 69. I levied on the property described in this paper, ‘exhibit E,’ on the 10th December, 1898. Q. Where did you have the paper, marked ‘exhibit E ?’ A. In the execution. 'My reason for putting it in there — -(Defendant's counsel objects to question upon ground that ‘exhibit E’ is a separate and distinct paper not in any manner connected with the execution, and purports to be and is the advertisement of the property for sale, and is not signed by the sheriff nor pasted to, nor otherwise'attached to, the execution) — was that there was so much property, that it was impossible for me to get sufficient space to copy the levy without writing it on a separate paper, and this is an exact copy of the levy, dictated by me to Mr. Hagood, my clerk, and placed inside of the execution as the levy on the property, and could have been found at any time in my office. Q. Do you know what paper you had this advertisement in? A. It was in The Barnwell Sentinel, which is published in this county. Q. Was the advertisement posted on the court house door? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was it posted and advertised from the 'date of the levy as stated in the book? A. Yes, sir. Recross: (‘Exhibit C’ shown witness.) Q. On the back of that execution I see your name written, is that your signature? A. No, sir. Q. Is that the signature of your regularly appointed-deputy ? A. No, sir, it was made by Mr. Hagood, my clerk. - Q. Does your official seal as sheriff appear anywhere upon that paper? A. No, sir. Q. You stated just now that ‘exhibit E’ was a copy of the levy made? A. Yes, sir. Q. Where is the original? ’A. That is an exact copy of the levy as made by me. We made three copies, one was the original, and two were the copies ; one was for the paper and one was to be posted upon the court house door and one as levy — this paper here. Q. As a fact, then, there were three originals? A. Yes, sir, made *328 at. the same time upon a typewriter. The other two were exactly like that one. Q. Did you sign that paper (‘exhibit E’ being shown witness) ? A. No, sir, but I dictated the signature.” It seems that there is no dispute as to the facts. Section 2114 of the Rev. Stat. is as follows: “The sheriff shall make a memorandum in writing of the date of every levy and specify the property upon which the levy has been made on the process or in a schedule thereunto' annexed, and. if more than one process shall be levied on such property, reference on each shall be made to such memorandum on schedule.” In the case of Tyler v. Williams, 53 S. C., 367, the Court, in construing this section, says: “To constitute a levy, therefore, four things may be done: 1st, Memorandum in writing must be made by the sheriff. 2d. This memorandum must contain the date of the levy. 3d. It must specify the property levied on. 4th. Such memorandum must be made on the execution or in such schedule thereto annexed.” It is not contended that there was a failure to comply with the first three of said requirements, but that the memorandum was not annexed to the execution. While it is true there was not in technical strictness the physical annexing of the memorandum to the execution, there was, nevertheless, a substantial compliance with the provisions of the statute. This technical defect worked no injury to the rights of any of the parties. The exception must be sustained.

2 The respondent’s attorneys served the following notice: “Please take notice that if an appeal to the Supreme Court is perfected in the above stated ca§es, the defendants will insist that the order of nonsuit and judgment thereon be sustained upon the following grounds upon which the motion for nonsuit was based, and which was urged in argument before the Circuit Court and passed upon by the presiding Judge, to' wit: That plaintiff had failed to make out his case, in that the deed from the sheriff to' the plaintiff, under the execution sale in the case of Kennedy v. Weathersbee, did not bear the requisite U. S. revenue *329 stamps, and hence was not in evidence.” The provisions of the United States statutes upon which the respondents rely are: Schedule “A,”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.E. 942, 59 S.C. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-roundtree-sc-1901.