Moyle v. Campbell

119 S.E. 186, 126 S.C. 180, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 12, 1923
Docket11293
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 119 S.E. 186 (Moyle v. Campbell) 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
Moyle v. Campbell, 119 S.E. 186, 126 S.C. 180, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 159 (S.C. 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

The plaintiff, claiming as a remainderman under a deed in the form of a marriage settlement, executed in 1856, brought this action in January, 1922, to recover possession of 100 acres of land in Beaufort County. On the trial below the presiding Judge refused defendant’s motion for nonsuit, and granted plaintiff’s motion for the direction of a verdict. From judgment on the verdict, the defendant appeals.

The nature of the questions raised necessitates a ' full statement of the relevant evidential facts.

In July, 1856, Annie P. Fripp, being about to marry Charles C. Lee,- and being the owner in fee of an undivided interest-in certain personal property and in real estate, situate in Beaufort district, of which the land here in controversy was a part, entered into a tripartite agreement providing for the conveyance and settlement of her said property. The parties to this contract were Annie P. Fripp, spinster, of the first part, Charles C. Lee, the prospective husband, of the second part, and Ann H. Fripp and William J. DeTreville, trustees, of the third part. The venue of this contract and of the probate thereof is laid in the “State of South Carolina, Beaufort district.” All of the parties thereto-, except Charles C. Lee, appear to have resided in Beaufort district. The legal domicile of Charles C. Lee at the time of the execution of the contract was in the State of North Carolina. Within five days after the date of its execution the instrument was recorded in the office of the Secretary of State. All records in the Beaufort County Courthouse were destroyed during *184 the Civil War. It does not affirmatively appear that this deed was ever recorded in the office of the register of mesne conveyances of Beaufort district. The instrument was not recorded or re-recorded therein after the Civil War. The marriage contemplated by the parties to this contract was subsequently consummated. Thereafter the matrimonial domicile of the husband and wife was the State o'f North Carolina.

By the terms of the marriage settlement Annie P. Fripp conveyed unto Ann H. Fripp and Wm. J. DeTreville, as trustees, to them and to the survivor of them, and the heirs, executors, and administrator of such survivor, the real and personal property therein described, in trust for the following uses: (1) For Annie P. Fripp, her heirs and assigns, until the solemnization of the marriage; (2) thereafter in trust to pay over to Charles C. Lee the rents, profits, income, etc., of the property for the joint use and maintenance of Charles C. Lee and Annie P. Fripp for and during their joint lives, to be free, however, from the debts, contracts, etc., of Charles C. Lee; (3) after the death of either of them in trust to permit and suffer the survivor of them to take the income and profits for his or her use and maintenance, and the maintenance of any issue of the marriage then living, during his or her natural life; (4) after the death of such survivor to apply the income and profits to the use and maintenance of the children of the marriage until the eldest attains the age of 21 years or marries; (5) upon the happening of either of said events in trust to “reconvey, retransfer, and assign” all the property to the child or children living at the death of the survivor, to be equally divided, etc., the child or children of any deceased child to take the share the parent would have taken, etc.; (6) in default of issue, then in trust to convey and set over the property to the heirs at law of Annie P. Fripp, to be divided according to the Statute of distribution, freed and discharged from the trust. The deed further empowers the “trustees and the survivor of them and *185 the heirs, executors and administrators of such survivor at any time or times during the joint lives of the said Charles C. Lee and the said Annie P. Fripp, and the life of the survivor of them, by the direction and with the approbation of the said Charles C. Lee and Annie P. Fripp, or the survivor of them, testified by any writing, * *> * to make sale of, transfer in exchange for or in lieu of any other lands or negroes, any part or parts of the land, * * * to be sold and exchanged in fee simple and absolutely to any person or persons whomsoever for such price or prices in money or any other equivalent as to such trustees of the survivor of them, his heirs, executors and administrators, shall seem reasonable,” provided, nevertheless, that the proceeds of any such sale or exchange etc., shall, “with such consent and approbation,” be reinvested for the uses declared. The trustees, “in consideration of the premises and of five dollars to them paid,” covenant and agree that they will receive the personal property “and will enter on and possess themselves of * * * the real estate; * * * that they will hold and manage the said real estate,” etc., in and upon the trusts and for the uses declared. Charles C. Lee died. His wife, Annie P. Fripp Lee, survived him, and afterward married Matthew Moyle. She died September 12, 1920.

The plaintiff, who,at the time of the trial was 65 years old, is a child of Charles C. Lee and his wife, Annie P. Fripp, and was the only child of said marriage living at the death of her mother, except possibly on sister who had not been heard from or of for many years. The trustees named in the marriage settlement were dead at the date of the death of Annie P. Moyle (Lee, nee Fripp). One of these trustees, Wm. J. DeTreville, was living in 1886, in which year an undivided interest, in certain land, embraced in the marriage settlement, of which the tract here involved appears to be a part, was set apart and allotted to said Wm. J. DeTreville, as trustee for Annie P. Moyle (formerly Lee, nee Fripp), in a suit for partition, the record in which suit forms judg *186 ment roll No. 1703 in the office of the clerk of the Court for Beaufort County. It was therein adjudged that the title or estate in and to the land .so set apart was in the said Wm. J. DeTreville in fee as trustee for the said Annie P. Moyle. The answer of Wm. J. DeTreville in said partition suit refers to the foregoing marriage settlement, “recorded in Secretary of State’s office in Columbia,” as the grant from which his authority as trustee is derived. Wm. J. DeTreville died about 1898, leaving surviving him a son, who was living at the time of the trial. In 1902, Annie P. Moyle (formerly Dee, nee Fripp), with the knowledge of this plaintiff, by an ordinary warranty deed purporting to convey the fee, conveyed the land here in controversy to David DKistler for value. This deed contains the following:

“For Father Reference, Mrs. Annie P. Moyle inhearet the above lands from her farther, Edward Fripp. For Further Reference, see papers filed in the Clerk office of Beaufort County, South Carolina, No. 1703.”

On July 22, 1904, David D. Kistler conveyed for value by warranty deed to J. W. Campbell, the defendant, and C. M. Guffin. Under this deed the defendant, Campbell, entered into possession, erected buildings, and has lived on the land and farmed it, claiming it as the property of himself and cotenant, since 1904. In May 1919,; his cotenant, Guffin, conveyed to the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.E. 186, 126 S.C. 180, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moyle-v-campbell-sc-1923.