Neal v. Pearson

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 6, 2007
Docket2007-UP-340
StatusUnpublished

This text of Neal v. Pearson (Neal v. Pearson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neal v. Pearson, (S.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE.  IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS
PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals


Thomas O’Neal, Rhudean Spencer, Aquilla O’Neal, Jeral H. Smith, Finley O’Neal, Jr., Virgil D.H. O’Neal, Diane P. Kennedy, Linda Butler, Walter O’Neal, Evelyn O’Neal, George O’Neal, Jr., Raye Boyd, Gaye Harper, Cynthia Riley, Santana Jarboe, Cassandra Horton, and Crystal Mims, Respondents/Appellants,

v.

Unita Pearson, Hattie Lee Black, Ruby Young, Patrick O’Neal, and (as defendants whose names are unknown) any child or children and any heirs at law or distributees or devisees of the above named persons if they or any of them be dead, and any and all persons entitled to claim by, through or under them, or any of them; also any and all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, estate, interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein, all such unknown adults who are sui juris being as a class designated as John Doe and all such persons who are under the age of eighteen (18) years, incompetent, incarcerated, in the military service or suffering under some other legal disability being as a class designated as Richard Roe, Appellants/Respondents.


Appeal from Fairfield County
 Kenneth G. Goode, Circuit Court Judge


Unpublished Opinion No. 2007-UP-340
Heard February 6, 2007 – Filed July 6, 2007   


AFFIRMED


D. Reece Williams, III, and Louis H. Lang, both of Columbia, for Appellants/Respondents.

Raymon E. Lark, Jr., and E. Crosby Lewis, both of Columbia, for Respondents/Appellants.

PER CURIAM:  Certain intestate heirs of Walter Wise O’Neal (collectively “the O’Neals”) challenged a 1961 deed granting 100 acres of property to Unita Pearson, alleging the deed was forged.  The case was first submitted to a jury, which answered the questions set forth in a special verdict form.  The trial court then considered the equitable issues and upheld the deed.  Pearson and the O’Neals both appeal.  We affirm.

FACTS

Before his death, Walter Wise O’Neal (Father) owned over two hundred acres of land in Fairfield County.  He had nine children.  He and some of his children lived on the land in a home the family called the “Big House.”  Sometime after his wife’s death, he moved in with his daughter, Unita Pearson.  Pearson filled the role of matriarch in the family. 

Beginning in 1961, Father deeded one-acre tracts to his children.  Most of the children built houses on the tracts.  Also in 1961, Father allegedly conveyed 100 acres of his land to Pearson.  The deed appears to be properly witnessed and notarized.  Pearson testified Father gave her the executed deed, but she did not see him sign it.  According to Pearson, Father told her to take the deed and record it.  She placed the unrecorded deed in a trunk in her home.  She did not record the deed until August 9, 1969.

In 1964, Father had a stroke.  Pearson subsequently became Father’s primary caregiver; while the other children often brought him food and spent time with him.  Father died intestate in 1968. 

Pearson handled the family affairs after Father died.  She paid all of the property taxes and leased hunting rights to the land.  However, testimony also indicates the other children would give her money to help pay the property taxes when the revenue from leasing hunting rights did not cover the tax bill. 

In the fall of 1999, Leon Thompson, a surveyor, found the deed in the Fairfield County courthouse and informed George O’Neal, another of Father’s children, of the deed’s existence.  George and his son went to an attorney, who recommended hiring a handwriting expert.  As a result, they hired Marvin H. Dawson, Jr. to examine the deed.  Dawson issued a report, opining the signature on the deed was not Father’s and Pearson could not be eliminated as the person who signed Father’s name.  After receiving more samples, he contended Pearson signed Father’s name on the deed.[1] 

In early 2001, Pearson sold timber from the 100 acre tract for $222,203.00.  The O’Neals filed the present action on April 19, 2001.  They later obtained a temporary injunction, restraining Pearson from using any of the remaining proceeds of the timber sale. 

The O’Neals amended their complaint twice.  The second amended complaint alleged Father did not sign the deed and that Pearson forged his signature.  As a result, the O’Neals sought to set aside the deed, damages for fraud, an accounting of all funds generated from Pearson’s use of the 100-acre tract, a constructive trust over the remaining funds, a judicial partition of the 100-acre tract, and a partition of all of the land owned by Father at his death.  The O’Neals and Pearson later stipulated to the partition of the remaining land. 

Pearson’s answer to the Second Amended Complaint denied the forgery allegation and set up affirmative defenses of the statute of limitations, laches, estoppel, waiver, adverse possession, and presumption of a grant.  On March 17, 2004, Pearson was found to suffer from the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.  Consequently, she was unable to assist with her defense and her son was appointed as her guardian ad litem

The legal and equitable issues were bifurcated; Pearson and the O’Neals first tried the issues of forgery and fraud before a jury.  The O’Neals explained they would prove Father did not sign the deed and Pearson forged the deed.  Several family members testified, as did Dawson.  In addition, Pearson’s deposition testimony was read into the record. 

After all the evidence was presented, the O’Neals and Pearson agreed to a jury verdict form, which reads, in pertinent part:

1. Did Walter Wise O’Neal sign the deed to the 100 acres in question?

___ Yes. If you answer yes, stop.

___ No. If you answer no, go to question 2.

2. Did Defendant Unita Pearson commit forgery by signing the deed to the 100 acres in question?

___ Yes. If you answer yes, go to question 3.

___ No. If you answer no, stop.

3. Did Defendant Unita Pearson commit fraud against Plaintiffs?

___ Yes. If you answer yes, go to question 4.

___ No. If you answer no, go to question 5.

4. If you answered yes to either question 2, question 3, or questions 2 and 3, then please answer the following question: what is the total amount of actual damages from Defendant Unita Pearson to which Plaintiffs are entitled as a result of their forgery, fraud, or forgery and fraud claims?

. . . .

In its jury instructions, the trial court explained the jury would decide the issues of fraud and forgery.  The jury deliberated and returned a verdict, checking “No” on question 1 and “No” on question 2 of the verdict form.  As instructed, the jury stopped after finding Pearson did not forge the deed by signing it. 

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Neal v. Pearson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-pearson-scctapp-2007.