Merck v. Merck

78 S.E. 1027, 95 S.C. 328, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 29, 1913
Docket8628
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 78 S.E. 1027 (Merck v. Merck) 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
Merck v. Merck, 78 S.E. 1027, 95 S.C. 328, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 234 (S.C. 1913).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Gary.

This is the third appeal herein; the first is reported in 83 S. C. 329, 65 S. E. 347, and the second in 89 S. C. 347.

The following statement appears in the record:

“This is an action instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for Pickens county on December'22, 1906, by the plaintiffs as heirs at law, children of one Blumer Merck, for the partition of a certain tract of land in Pickens county, described in the complaint, which formerly belonged to Blumer Merck, now deceased.
“The defendants, Lawrence C. Merck, son of Blumer Merck, and Ella Burton, B. Stewart and K. Stewart, children of Parthena Stewart, a predeceased daughter of Blumer Merck, were made parties defendant as tenants in common with the plaintiff. None of them answered the complaint.
“The defendant, W. B. Mann, answered the complaint denying title in the plaintiffs, and setting up' a claim of title in fee in himself.
“The case was tried before Hon. R. W. Memminger, presiding Judge, at Pickens, March term, 1912.
“The legal issues of title were submitted to a jury; the jury found a verdict in favor of the defendant, W. B. Mann, that he was entitled to the possession of the land in dispute, and thereupon the presiding Judge signed an order confirming the verdict of the jury and dismissing the complaint. Upon this decree and verdict, judgment was duly entered up by the said defendant, W. B. Mann, against the *331 plaintiffs, from which the plaintiffs above-named have appealed to this Court.”

The opinions on the former appeals, especially the first, state the facts in detail.

1 There are four exceptions, but it will not be necessary to consider them seriatim, as the appellants’ attorneys have discussed them under two heads, the first of which is as follows : “Is the testimony offered by the defendant, Mann, upon the subject of the execution and delivery of the deed from Blumer Merck to L. C. Merck of such character as to constitute some evidence of the complete execution and delivery of the deed, and so entitled the defendant, Mann, to have the issue of complete execution and delivery submitted to the jury?”

During the trial which resulted in the second appeal (89 S. C. 347), this Court, after sustaining the ruling of his Honor, the Circuit Judge, that M. F. Hester was not a competent witness, to prove the execution of the deed from Blumer Merck to L. C. Merck, on the ground that he was disqualified under section 400 (now 438) of the Code, proceeded as follows:

“The defendant, Mann, was in this plight: Mrs. D. C. Merck, one of the persons whose names were subscribed as witnesses to the alleged deed from Blumer Merck to L. C. Merck, was hostile and upon being put on the stand, testified in effect that the deed was not delivered. The other witness, Hester, was excluded because disqualified by interest. Under these conditions the defendant, Mann, had a right to introduce other testimony, tending to prove the execution of the deed; the evidence of the handwriting of the witnesses, of the grantor’s acknowledgment of the validity of the deed after its execution, and of any facts tending to show that the deed had been executed, was clearly admissible. Land titles would be very insecure if they should fail whenever the subscribing witnesses might deny, that they witnessed the execution'of a deed, or might become *332 for any cause incompetent to testify to its execution. It is true, in proving a deed, the subscribing witnesses must be produced or their absence accounted for, but manifestly the title cannot be made to depend entirely on their testimony. Whenever the witnesses are dead or inaccessible, or have become incapacitated, or deny the execution or their presence, or for any cause are unable or unwilling to prove the execution, then other evidence may be introduced. This is a principle of general recognition. (Citing authorities.) On this principle, the Court erred also in holding, that the admission of Blumer Merck, that he had conveyed the lands to his son, T. C. Merck, were not admissible as evidence of the execution of the deed, but only to show the character of the possession. Such admission, together with testimony as to the handwriting of the grantor, and of the witnesses, as to the independent possession ánd control of the lands by the grantee, and as to the recording of the deed, were all admissible, either to' support the testimony of the subscribing witnesses, that the deed had been executed, or in substitution of the testimony of the subscribing witnesses, if that testimony, without fault of the party in interest, was not available, or was adverse. * * * As the case is to go back for a new trial, we refrain from any discussion or expression of opinion as tO' the facts further than to say, that we think there was a scintilla of evidence, for the consideration of the jury, on the issue of estoppel.”

The appellants’ attorneys thus summarize the. testimony introduced by the defendant, for the purpose of proving the execution and delivery of the deed from Blumer Merck to L. C. Merck.

“The handwriting of M. K. Hester and that of Tizzie Merck, whose signatures appear as subscribing witnesses, we will assume has been proved.

“The handwriting of M. F. Hester in the signature of Blumer Merck, by his mark, we will assume has been provecí.

*333 “Four witnesses testified, that at different times they had heard Blumer Merck say, after the date of the deed, that he had deeded the land to L. C. Merck.

“The fact that the deed was recorded in the R. M. C. office of Pickens county on December 10, 1904, nearly three years after its date.

“That after the death of Blumer Merck, D. C. Merck was in possession of the land, claiming title thereto under said deed, and conveyed same to M. F. Hester, besides having exercised other acts of ownership, such as cultivating the land, mortgaging it and returning it for taxation, all within the brief period of from May to September, 1905.”

The testimony tending to establish said facts was admissible under the ruling of the Court, which we have just quoted; and if his Honor, the presiding Judge, had undertaken to determine its force and effect, he would have invaded the province of the jury.

2 The second question discussed by the appellants’ attorneys is as follows: “Did the presiding Judge err in submitting to the jury the issue of estoppel, based upon the alleged negligence of Blumer Merck in making a deed complete on its face, lacking only delivery to make it a good conveyance, and then leaving it where the grantee named in the paper could easily take it, thus inducing others to accept him as the real owner of the land, and instructing the jury, that upon the solution of said issue, his title would be good, even if the deed of Blumer Merck had never been delivered ?”

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.E. 1027, 95 S.C. 328, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merck-v-merck-sc-1913.