Levi v. Gardner

30 S.E. 617, 53 S.C. 24, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 617 (Levi v. Gardner) 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
Levi v. Gardner, 30 S.E. 617, 53 S.C. 24, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 125 (S.C. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This is an action to recover real estate, and the appeal is from a judgment in favor of the defendants. The evidence tended to show that the parties claimed from a common source, Wm. N. Gardner, the husband of the defendant, Elizabeth Gardner. Plaintiff’s claim of title was (1) deed by John R. Thames and A. L. Thames to Wm. Gardner, dated November 21,1838, recorded March 29th, 1876; (2) deed of Wm. N. Gardner to the plaintiff, Moses Levi, dated March 4,1876, recorded March 20,1876, [26]*26on. which the defendant, Elizabeth Gardner, renounced dower; (3) deed of Moses Levi to Mrs. J. A. Gardner, dated February 21st, 1885, recorded February 23d, 1885; (4) deed of Mrs. J. A. Gardner back to plaintiff, September 6, 1887.

The defendant offered in evidence: (1) Judgment and execution against Wra, N. Gardner, in the case of Mayrant and Richardson v. Win. N. Gardner, obtained in 1850. Sale of the land under execution in July, 1850, and payment of the bid by the purchaser, J. R. Felder; but no deed from the sheriff to Felder was introduced or shown to have been executed or recorded. (2) Deed from J. R. Felder, the purchaser at said sale by the sheriff, to John J. Ragin, dated January 31st, 1853, recorded December 15th, 1853. (3) Deed from John J. Ragin to John M. Rowe, in trust, dated January 8th, 1863, recorded June 13th, 1863, the trust being declared in the deed as follows: “In trust for the joint use and benefit of the said William N. Gardner and his wife, Elizabeth, during their natural lives, and at their death to such child or children as they may have surviving, &c.”

1 1. Appellant’s first exception imputes error as follows: “1. Because his Honor refused to charge the plaintiff’s second request, which is as follows:' ‘The plaintiff having traced his title back to W. N. Gardner, need not go beyond that source, if all parties claim from W. N. Gardner, but can rest'there — and the question then is, who has the best title from W. N. Gardner; and, even if it be proven that

Felder procured the sheriff to make him a deed to the land in dispute, the defendants here cannot set up that title as against the plaintiff, unless it be recorded, or unless the plaintiff had actual notice that such title had been made; the recording of the Rowe and Ragin deeds would not supply this defect and give the notice required;’ whereas, it is respectfully submitted, his Honor should have granted such charge as the law applicable to this case; and his Honor further erred in holding that said request embraced statements of fact, and in declining to charge the same on that ground, when the same did not contain state[27]*27ments of facts, but only conclusions of law drawn from the construction of the deeds put in evidence.” The Circuit Judge refused to charge as requested, because the proposition seemed to him to involve a statement of fact, and we do not think he erred. The statement: “The plaintiff having traced his title back to W. N. Gardner, need not go beyond that source, if all parties claimed from W. N. Gardner, &c.,” involved more than a mere construction of deeds in evidence, and a statement of their legal effect. It involved a statement that plaintiff had duly proved the execution of the deeds in his claim of title, and that the land in dispute was identical with the land described in the several deeds constituting his claim of title. Whether plaintiff had traced his title back to a common source, was a fact for the jury to determine. Besides this, the Circuit Judge had already charged clearly and explicitly: “When both parties claim through the same person as a common source, they do not have to go beyond that source. Then the simple question is, if the common source has been shown, who has the better title? And who shows the best title from the common source is entitled to recover the land.” Having clearly presented the law on this point, he was not bound to repeat it, especially if the repetition of it, in his judgment, involved a statement of facts in issue.

2 2. The second exception having been abandoned, we now consider the third exception. This imputes error in charging, at the request of defendants, as follows: “That under the sale of land by the sheriff, the purchaser at said sale, after paying his bid, is entitled to the title, and the purchaser, or his grantee, is entitled to the possession of the land in an action between them and the judgment debtor, and those claiming under him, unless they show a better title.” It is specified that this was error, because such a sale by the sheriff without a deed gives the purchaser a mere equitable title and not a legal right to sue; that such charge is inconsistent with other portions of'his charge, made at request of plaintiff, and was confus[28]*28ing and misleading to the jury. The Judge, at request of appellant, had charged as follows: “1. If the jury be satisfied that Felder, the alleged purchaser of the land in dispute, did not procure the sheriff to make a deed to him of the land (if it has been made to appear that all parties to this action claim from W. N. Gardner), the plaintiff having shown a legal title in himself and traced it back to W. N. Gardner, the defendants cannot set up an equitable title as against the plaintiff’s legal title. * * 8. If Felder failed to take a deed from the sheriff for the land in dispute, then he had a mere equitable title, wdiich he could have perfected by taking the proper steps to complete the same.” The charge complained of, at first blush, might seem inconsistent with the charge last above quoted, but when rightly construed in the light of the question before the jury, there is no inconsistency. In this case, no one was suing to recover land in an action at law on a mere equitable title. The defendant was in possession of the land, and was resisting plaintiff’s claim of title under a general denial. The Judge had already charged the jury, that if Felder failed to take a deed from the sheriff, then he had a mere equitable title, and that a mere equitable title could not be set up against a plaintiff’s legal title. In the charge complained of, he merely meant to say that a defendant in possession of land, claiming under an equitable title, has the right to retain such possession, unless the plaintiff could show a better title. In other words, plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title, and where both plaintiff and defendant claim from a common source, in order to recover, the plaintiff must show a superior title from the common source.

3 3. The fourth exception, alleging error “in refusing to grant plaintiff’s motion for new trial,” is too general.

4 4. The fifth exception is as follows: “5. Because his Honor erred in submitting to the jury the character of the possession of William N. Gardner, as to whether he entered or was holding under the alleged trust deed [29]*29of Ragin to Rowe as trustee, and in charging the jury that if he was in possession of the land under the trust deed, that he and those claiming under him could not dispute the title; and that if there was anything in the trust deed to put any one on inquiry, it was his duty to pursue the inquiry and go to the index, in that: 1. There was nothing to connect Ragin and Rowe with Wm. N. Gardner of record. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 617, 53 S.C. 24, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levi-v-gardner-sc-1898.