Munn v. McWhite

61 S.E. 970, 80 S.C. 472, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 8, 1908
Docket6945
StatusPublished

This text of 61 S.E. 970 (Munn v. McWhite) 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
Munn v. McWhite, 61 S.E. 970, 80 S.C. 472, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 195 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

The plaintiffs began their action on the 16th day of January, 1906, and in their complaint allege: that they are the owners and entitled to one hundred and forty-one and one-half acres of land, situate in Florence county, in said State, and bounded on the northeast by Georgetown road; on the southeast by lands of P. I. Bostick, and on the southwest and northwest by lands known as the Mary J. McWhite estate lands; and that the defendants are in possession and refuse to yield possession to the plaintiffs.

In due time the defendants answered, denying each and every allegation of the complaint, and praying that the same be dismissed, with costs.

The case came on to be heard at the March term, 1907, of the Court of Common Pleas, for Florence county, before Judge J. C. Klugh and a jury; after hearing the testimony and the charge by his Honor, the jury rendered a verdict for the defendants. Whereupon, the plaintiffs appealed to this Court upon eleven exceptions. We will now consider those exceptions. Let the exceptions be reported.

The first, fifth, ninth and tenth will be considered together, as they relate to the same subject.

1 It seems that Capt. B. B. McWhite, of Florence county, was so unfortunate, in 1871, as to have recovered against him a judgment for the sum of one thousand, three hundred and fifty-one and 42-100 dollars, and that he secured a homestead in lands to be admeasured to him, after which all his remaining lands were sold by the sheriff.

By the return of the commissioners the homestead admeasured to Captain McWhite was the little swamp tract, containing three hundred acres, and a tract of one hundred *478 and forty-one and one-half acres carved out of what was known as the river tract.

In 1874 Captain McWhite acquired from Tom McWhite a tract of six hundred and seventy-eight acres.

In 1884 Captain McWhite applied to the Dundee Mortgage and Trust Investment Company for a loan of $2,500, and gave a mortgage on three tracts of land to secure said loan, and as the first step in said transaction he made out a written application, wherein he stated he owned three tracts of land and no other, and accompanying this application, he showed a rough plat, which represented the three tracts to be entirely separate and distinct. The blue print accompanying (page 110, of the “Case”) is an exact copy of this plat, made on the 12th day of April, 1884, which was as follows: No. 1, containing 678 acres, bounded north by Bragdon’s land; south by W. M. McNeill and Bardin lands; east by Baisin lands; west by B. D. Poston’s. No. 2, 500 acres, north by H. Bartell; south by Thomas Johnson; east by Belin; west by Altman and Edwards. No. 3, 147 acres, north by a part of last described land, also east and west; south by P. I. Bostick. Under a decree of foreclosure these three tracts of land were sold and bid in by the Atlantic Coast Dumber Company. The Atlantic Coast Dumber Company was subsequently reorganized as the Atlantic Coast Dumber Corporation, and on the 6th day of June, 1905, this latter company conveyed the lands acquired at the McWhite sale to the plaintiffs, S. A. Munn and Walter Cain.

In the deed to Messrs. Munn and Cain, Nos. 1 and 2 are described as in the McWhite mortgage, and tract No. 3 as follows: “All that certain tract of land situated in the County of Florence and State of South Carolina, containing 147 acres, more or less, and bounded on the north by the estate of Mary J. McWhite; on the east by lands of Mary J. McWhite; on the south by P. I. Bostick, and west by lands of the estate of Mary J. McWhite.” The blue print, at page *479 103, is a copy of this plat, and the acreage is shown to be 14:1% acres.

After purchasing the lands Messrs. Munn and Cain obtained possession of tracts Nos. 1 and 3, but the defendants refused to give them possession of tract No. 3. This refusal leads to the present trial. At the trial it developed that defendants contended: first, that when plaintiffs obtained possession of the Tom McWhite and the home or Little Swamp tract they had obtained possession of all the land they had purchased, for the reason that the home tract consisted of the home tract proper and the Tony Mitchell tract — this last tract being tract 3, described in the McWhite mortgage and the subsequent deed from McCown, clerk to Atlantic Coast Lumber Company. The second position is that this was not the tract intended and the description was too indefinite to convey anything.

Plaintiffs, on the other hand, insisted that tract No. 3, as purchased by them, was a portion of the River tract, set apart to Captain McWhite as part of his homestead, and that the description as being bounded “north by part of the last described tract; bounded east and west by the same tract,” was erroneous if by the “last described tract” was meant the home or Little Swamp tract immediately preceding it in the description, as that tract of land was several miles away. Now the question occurs, was the ruling of the Circuit Judge correct when he refused to allow in evidence the application and rough plat accompanying said application by Capt. B. B. McWhite to secure a loan of $3,500 from the Dundee Mortgage and Trust Investment Company, when it was in proof that the said B. B. McWhite was in possession of the said three tracts of land at the time his loan was granted by the Dundee company, and in which application of Capt. B. B. McWhite, it is stated by him that all of the lands he owned in the world were included in his application for said loan? Now it must be remembered that the defendants were privies in blood and in estate of said B. B. McWhite, that his representation in relation to said *480 lands were made while he was the owner and in possession of the same.

The imbiguity was a latent ambiguity arising in the language, “north by part of last described tract, east and west by same described tract,” and it was admissible to show that the true meaning of such language by Captain McWhite was not to deny his statements by deed or otherwise. The latter could not have been done. This Court held in Jennings v. Talbert, 77 S. C., 454, 58 S. E., 420, that testimony might be introduced to show the true meaning of a latent ambiguity, and that such testimony was by parol. See also the cases 17th Cyc., 678; Willis v. Hammond, 41 S. C., 163, 19 S. E., 310; Bickley v. Bank, 43 S. C., 535, 21 S. E., 886; Alexander v. McDaniel, 56 S. C., 250, 34 S. E., 405; Rapley v. Klugh, 40 S. C., 145, 18 S. E., 680; Colvin v. Oil Co., 66 S. C., 68, 44 S. E., 380; Bruce v. Moon, 57 S. C., 60, 35 S. E., 45. And in Renwick v. Renwick, 9 Rich., 53, it is held: “The declaration of parties may be given in evidence against their subsequent grantees.” Westbury v. Simmons, 57 S. C., 471, 35 S. E., 764. The Circuit Judge was, therefore, in error when he refused to allow the testimony referred to. We sustain these exceptions (first, fifth, ninth and tenth).

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Related

Jennings v. Talbert
58 S.E. 420 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)
Colvin v. McCormick Cotton Oil Co.
44 S.E. 380 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1903)
Rapley v. Klugh
18 S.E. 680 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1893)
Willis v. Hammond
19 S.E. 310 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1894)
Bickley v. Commercial Bank
21 S.E. 886 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1895)
Alexander v. McDaniel
34 S.E. 405 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1899)
Westbury v. Simmons
35 S.E. 764 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 970, 80 S.C. 472, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munn-v-mcwhite-sc-1908.