Mellichamp v. Mellichamp

5 S.E. 333, 28 S.C. 125, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 23, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 333 (Mellichamp v. Mellichamp) 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
Mellichamp v. Mellichamp, 5 S.E. 333, 28 S.C. 125, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 24 (S.C. 1888).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McIver.

This action was instituted for the purpose of obtaining partition of a certain tract of land described in the complaint, containing 3,771 acres, and the several questions [127]*127raised by the appellants grow out of the following facts : on January 15, 1878, one John Mobley conveyed the tract of land described in the complaint to the defendant, “Marion R. Mobley, and the children she already has and may hereafter bear by her husband,” Edward P. Mobley, sr. At the time of the execution of this deed Mrs. Mobley had borne to her said husband the following children, viz., Edward P., jr., Moses H., Kate (who had intermarried with the plaintiff), Marion, Jones, Hattie, and Nancy— seven in number — all of whom were then living. After the said deed was executed, another child — the defendant, Berry H. Mobley — was born to the said Marion R. and Edward P. Mobley, sr., whose right to participate in the partition is disputed by some of the parties.

Some time after the marriage of the plaintiff with Kate Mobley they went into possession of a tract of land, known as the Bucklick place, which had previously been conveyed to Mrs. Marion R. Mobley by the said John Mobley, under an alleged gift from Mrs. Mobley, but no title was then executed. Kate Mellichamp died intestate some time in the year 1880, leaving as her heirs at law, her husband, the plaintiff, and her two children, Marion R. Mellichamp and Kate S. Mellichamp, defendants herein. Shortly before the commencement of this action, proceedings were instituted by the plaintiff herein with his two children against Marion R. Mobley to enforce specific performance of her agreement to convey the Bucklick place to the plaintiff and his wife, which resulted in a decree, by consent, that Marion R. Mobley should convey to the plaintiff and his two children, as tenants in common, the said Bucklick place, the decree providing: “That the tract of land hereby required to be conveyed to the plaintiffs (in the action for specific performance) shall be taken by them and held by them, as aforesaid, in lieu and bar of all their interests in and to the real estate of the said Marion R. Mobley” by virtue of their heirship to the said Kate Mellichamp, deceased. This, it was insisted by some of the parties, deprived the Mellichamps of the right to participate in the partition of the tract of land described in the complaint, upon the ground that they had accepted the Bucklick place in lieu of such interest.

[128]*128It also appears that shortly before the commencement of this action a judgment was recovered by one Mockbee against the' defendants, Marion R. Mobley, Moses H. Mobley, and Edward P. Mobley, jr., and that when the sheriff was proceeding to enforce the execution issued upon such judgment, the defendants just named interposed their claim of homestead, under which the commissioners named for that purpose undertook to set off to said Edward P. Mobley, jr., three hundred acres of the tract in controversy, valuing the same at nearly one thousand dollars ; to said Moses IT. Mobley one hundred and fifty acres, valued at the same amount; and to said Marion R. Mobley one hundred and twenty acres, valued at nearly eight hundred dollars, after which the sheriff levied on and sold the interests of these parties in the remainder of the tract, and the same was bought by the defendants, T. G. Patrick and R. A. Patrick, who now hold sheriff’s titles for the same.

The Circuit Judge held that Berry H. Mobley, though born after the execution of the deed from John Mobley to Marion R. Mobley and her children, was entitled to share in the partition, and that the Mellichamps were not excluded from any interest in the land in controversy by reason of the conveyance of the Bucklick place to them. He therefore ordered “that a writ of partition do issue * * * to divide the same into nine parcels of equal value, and that three of said parcels do conform as near as may be to the boundaries of the homesteads assigned respectively to Marion R. Mobley, Edward P. Mobley, jr., and Moses H. Mobley, so that each of such three parcels shall include the whole of each of said respective homesteads in case the same shall be of less value than the several distributive shares of the said Marion R. Mobley, Edward P. Mobley, jr., and Moses H. Mobley ; and if said homesteads shall exceed in value such shares, then each of the said three parcels shall include so much of each respective homestead as shall be equal to the value of a share; and to allot to the said Marion R. Mobley, Edward P. Mobley, jr., and Moses H. Mobley, respectively, the parcels containing their respective homesteads, provided the same do not exceed their respective shares in the premises; and if sueh parcels, or either of them, shall exceed the homesteads of said defendants, to allot such ex[129]*129cess to the defendants, Thomas Gr. Patrick and Robert A. Patrick ; to allot one of the remaining parcels to the plaintiff and the defendants, Marion R. Mellichamp and Kate S. Mellichamp, and to allot one of the remaining parcels to each of the other defendants.”

To this decree the parties named above as appellants except on the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be repeated here, as these exceptions really present hut three inquiries, viz., 1st. Whether the after-born child, Berry H. Mobley, took any interest under the deed from John Mobley to Marion R. Mobley and her children. 2nd. Whether the Melliehamps can be excluded' from participation in the partition of the tract of land described in the complaint. 3rd. Whether there was any error in the mode prescribed for ascertaining the homestead interests of the defendants setting up such claim.

As to the first question, there can be no doubt that the intention was to include after-born children, for the language is, “unto the said Marion R. Mobley and the children she already has and may hereafter hear by her husband, the said Edward P. Mobley, sr.,” and it is difficult to conceive what language could have been employed more expressive of an intention to include after-born children. It is true that this question arises under a deed, and not under a will, where it is supposed greater weight is given to the intention ; but, as we understand it, when a court is called upon to construe any paper, the first effort should be to ascertain the intention of the parties from the language which they have used. It is, however, likewise true that sometimes the intention of the parties, although so clearly expressed as to leave no doubt upon the subject, cannot be carried into effect, even in case of a will, because such intention contravenes some settled rule of law ; and it is argued here that although the intention is plain to include after-born children, the deed cannot be given such effect because it violates the well established rule of law that “a freehold estate cannot be limited to commence in futuro,” and therefore as Berry H. Mobley was not in existence when this deed was executed, and when the estate granted passed out of the grantor, it could never afterwards have the effect of vesting any estate in him. The cases cited to support this view are [130]*130Stroman v. Rottenbury, 4 DeSaus. Eq., 268; Myers v. Myers, 2 McCord Ch., 214 (16 A. D., 648); McMeekin v. Brummet, 2 Hill Ch., 638; Holeman v. Fort, 3 Strob. Eq., 66 (51 A. D., 655); and Kitchens v. Craig, 1 Bail., 119.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 333, 28 S.C. 125, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mellichamp-v-mellichamp-sc-1888.