Knox v. Moore

19 S.E. 683, 41 S.C. 355, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 25, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 S.E. 683 (Knox v. Moore) 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
Knox v. Moore, 19 S.E. 683, 41 S.C. 355, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 121 (S.C. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

In the year 1848, Thornton Moore and Rindy Moore, while both were slaves, lived together as husband and wife. Children were the issue of that relation. On the ground of alleged infidelity, Thornton Moore refused to live with the said Rindy Moore some time about the year 1857, and in the year 1863 he married, according to the manner of slaves, the defendant, Yiney Moore, with whom he lived until the passage by the legislature of this State of the act to establish and regulate the domestic relations of persons of color, and to amend the law in relation to paupers and vagrancy. 13 Stat., 291. Just after the passage of this law, not earlier than 25th December, 1865, but about that time, Thornton Moore sought out the said Rindy Moore, and lodged her at Robert Hall’s, where he rented a farm and worked it during the year 1866, but he continued to visit Yiney Moore all this time as his wife. However, in the fall of the year 1866, he moved, [358]*358“bag and baggage,” to Yiney Moore, and lived with her as his wife until his death, which occurred in 1891.

When he died he was seized and possessed of a small tract of land, and an inconsiderable personal estate. Administration upon his personal effects was duly granted by the Probate Court of Abbeville County to the plaintiff, John N. Knox. His personal estate proving insufficient for the payment of his debts, his administrator brought an action against Eindy Moore, who claimed to be his widow, and Yiney Moore, who also claimed to be his widow, and the children begotten by him of Eindy Moore, to sell the land to pay debts. The question as to who was entitled, in law, to be considered the widow, was considered. The judgment of the Probate Court was in favor of Yiney Moore, and of the children born to Thornton Moore by Eindy Moore, as the heirs at law and next of kin of said Thornton, now deceased. From this judgment, Eindy Moore appealed to the Circuit Court for Abbeville. The judgment of that court affirmed that of the Probate Court, except that the defendant, Frank Moore, was excluded from the benefit thereof.

Eindy Moore now appeals from that j udgment o,n the following grounds, namely: 1. That his honor, Judge Norton, erred in not finding, under the act of 1865, that Thornton Moore made his election and chose Eindy as his wife, and that she is the lawful widow of Thornton Moore. 2. That he erred in holding that the act of 1865 applies to a case where a slave was lawfully married to another slave before the war. 3. That he erred in not holding that the evidence clearly shows that prior to the first day of April, 1866, Thornton Moore chose Eindy as his wife under the terms of said act, lived with her as his wife during the year 1866, acknowledged her as his wife, and that the general reputation was that she was his wife. 4. That he erred in holding that the evidence showed that Yiney Moore lived with Thornton Moore as his wife from the time of the alleged marriage, in 1863, up to the time of his death, in 1891, when the evidence is clear and undisputed that in the latter part of 1865, or the first of the year 1866, Thornton took Eindy as his wife and lived with her, and acknowledged her as such [359]*359during almost the entire year 1866. 5. That he erred in not holding that the alleged marriage with Yiney, in 1863, was not even a moral marriage, Rindy being alive at that time, and the person who attempted to perform the ceremony between Thornton and Yiney not being competent to perform the marriage ceremony. 6. That he erred in not holding that Rindy was entitled to a homestead in said land, except as to the mortgage debt. 7. That he erred in holding that Yiney was the lawful wife of Thornton Moore, after having held that Rindy was the moral wife of Thornton, her marriage having been prior in point of time, and the evidence showing that, after the act of 1865, Thornton recognized his moral as well as his legal liability, and took Rindy as his wife under the terms of said act. 8. That he erred in not holding that Rindy was the lawful wife of Thornton, although he affirmed the decree of the Probate Court which adjudged that two of Rindy’s children, born long after the war was ended, were the lawful children of Thornton. 9. That he erred in not finding from the clear and undisputed testimony that Thornton lived with Rindy and acknowledged her as his wife during the year 1866, the probate judge having failed in his decree to make any reference whatsoever to that fact, and the said Rindy Moore being prejudiced by the failure of the probate judge and of the Circuit Judge to make any finding upon that question, inasmuch as she is entitled to the opinion of the court upon the question of law arising out of that fact. 10. That he erred in not, at least, ordering a new trial, in order that the said Rindy Moore might have the benefit of an express finding of fact upon that point in the case, and go before the court untrammelled by the failure of the probate judge to find in her favor an important and undisputed fact. 11. That he erred in not reversing the decree of the Probate Court upon the exceptions taken by the said Rindy Moore thereto. 12. Because it was error in his honor, Judge Norton, more than two weeks after the date of his decree, and more than a week after the date it was filed in the clerk’s office, under the claim of correcting a clerical error in said decree, to amend his decree by inserting words which were entirely inconsistent therewith, and which made a new and different de[360]*360cree from the first one filed, there being no latent ambiguity in said first decree, and his honor having no right to amend and change a decree after it has been duly filed with the clerk of the court. 13. Because the said decree of his honor is in all respects contrary to the law of the case, and is not supported by the testimony adduced at the trial.

1 The 13th exception is too general and vague; it must be overruled.

2 The 12th exception, while complaining of an alteration in the decree made by the Circuit Judge after the same was filed with the clerk, fails to specify wherein the change was one of substance and not the correction of a clerical error. We cannot assume such a fact. All the presumptions are against it. The Circuit Judge points out exactly how the clerical error occurred. It is always desirable that the decrees of the Circuit Court should present the intended conclusions of law and fact reached by that court; and where, from inadvertence or mistake, a different result therein is made to appear, the Circuit Judge should be allowed to correct such clerical mistake. This court, in the case of Chafee & Co. v. Rainey, 21 S. C., 17, sustained the right of the Circuit Judge to make such a correction. And that case was very similar to this. Judge Norton has exercised the right then recognized in the Circuit Judge, and in doing so, he committed no error.

3 The 11th exception, referring, as it does, to exceptions to the decree of the probate judge without stating such exceptions, cannot be considered by us in this form. The exception must be overruled.

4 So far as exceptions 1, 3, 4, 9, and 10 relate to findings of fact by the Circuit Judge, they are overruled, under the well recognized rule, that no findings of fact by a Circuit Judge will be overruled unless unsupported by any evidence, or against the manifest weight of the testimony.

5 The other exceptions, however, raise questions of law which we will now consider.

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

Related

Mims v. Jones
91 S.E. 987 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1917)
Childs v. Childs
77 S.E. 50 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1913)
Watson v. Ellerbe
57 S.E. 855 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.E. 683, 41 S.C. 355, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-v-moore-sc-1894.