Ramage v. Ramage

322 S.E.2d 22, 283 S.C. 239, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 570
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 25, 1984
Docket0284
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 322 S.E.2d 22 (Ramage v. Ramage) 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
Ramage v. Ramage, 322 S.E.2d 22, 283 S.C. 239, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 570 (S.C. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Bell, Judge:

This is a proceeding in equity to enforce a trust to convey real estate. The circuit court upheld the validity of the trust and directed the trustees to transfer the property in accordance with its terms. We affirm.

On July 15,1976, Julia Lillian Evans executed a deed conveying a 150 acre tract in Saluda County to her nephews, Fred H. Ramage and J. Everett Ramage, “to hold in trust absolutely.” 1 Simultaneously, she executed a Codicil to her Will. The Codicil stated, among other things:

*242 I direct that Fred Ramage and Everett Ramage, who I have transferred or plan to transfer various real properties into their names as Trustees to be held In Trust, absolutely, convey said properties into my Estate to be distributed pursuant to my Will as if the properties had been held in my name individually at the time of my death.

At the time she executed these instruments, Mrs. Evans was ninety-one years old.

Mrs. Evans had a specific purpose for conveying her real properties in trust to Fred and Everett Ramage. Since an illness in 1974 she had been concerned about being “done out of her property.” On the advice of her physician she went to a lawyer in April 1976. After conferring with Mrs. Evans for five to six hours to ascertain her wishes, the lawyer drafted a Will, which Mrs. Evans executed on April 7,1976. Mrs. Evans did not want any member of her family to know the contents of the Will for fear she would be pressured to change it. To avoid this possibility, she and her lawyer agreed that the only copy of the Will would be kept in the lawyer’s safe.

Not long after she executed the Will,- one of her nephews, Dan Ramage, persuaded Mrs. Evans to deed certain real property to him. Afterwards, she felt Dan had coerced her to part with the land and regretted the decision. As a result of the incident with Dan, she became fearful that someone else might persuade her to convey her remaining property, leaving nothing to be distributed to those she wished to take at her death.

Mrs. Evans spoke to others, including Everett and Fred Ramage, about her distress over the conveyance to Dan. In July 1976, she asked Everett and Fred to take her to her lawyer because she wanted to change her Will. Everett accompanied her to the lawyer’s office. He spoke to the lawyer about the conveyance to Dan Ramage. It was agreed that Mrs. Evans should deed her real property to Fred and Everett in trust to prevent further conveyances. The trust deeds were prepared and executed. Mrs. Evans simultaneously executed the Codicil to her Will. In addition to the directions to her trustees recited above, the codicil contained a provision deleting Dan Ramage from certain legacies and devises in the Will because she had *243 already transferred real property to him during her lifetime. Everett Ramage knew the Will had been changed when the trust deeds were executed, although he did not see the Will or Codicil and did not know what disposition they made of Mrs. Evans’s property.

The admitted purpose of the trust deeds was to keep Mrs. Evans from conveying away her lands prior to her death. Both Fred and Everett Ramage testified they knew at the time the deeds were executed that the deeds were trust deeds, that they held the property as trustees, and that the general purpose of the trust was to prevent Mrs. Evans from conveying away any more property.

In March 1978, Fred and Everett Ramage sought advice from another attorney about the trust deeds. Acting on Everett’s instructions, the second attorney drew a quitclaim deed conveying Mrs. Evans’s interest in the Saluda county property to Fred and Everett. The quitclaim deed recited that it had never been her intention to convey the property in trust to Fred and Everett. After the quitclaim deed had been drafted, Fred and Everett took Mrs. Evans to the attorney’s office where she executed it.

Mrs. Evans died the following year at the age of ninety-four. Her Will, which was not changed after the Codicil was executed in July 1976, devised the Saluda County property in equal shares to five nephews, Fred, Everett, Victor, Jack, and Theron Ramage. When Fred and Everett (the Trustees) refused to convey the property to Mrs. Evans’s estate as directed by the Codicil, Victor and Jack brought this action to have the quitclaim deed set aside and to enforce the terms of the trust.

After holding an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court set aside the quitclaim deed because it violated the terms of the trust as understood by the Trustees. The court then ordered the Trustees to convey the property to the estate of Mrs. Evans as directed in the Codicil. From this ruling the Trustees appeal.

The Trustees’ exceptions are in plain violation of Rule 4, Section 6, Rules of Practice in the Supreme Court of South Carolina, because they fail to contain a complete assignment of error. Some of them also raise issues which were not framed by the pleadings nor passed on by the trial court. In these circumstances, we would be justified in dis *244 missing the appeal. See Charleston Housewrecking Co., Inc. v. Canadian Universal Insurance Co., 319 S. E. (2d) 338 (S. C. 1984). We have chosen, however, to consider those issues which are reasonably clear from the Trustees’ arguments and which were ruled on by the trial court. See Bartles v. Livingston, 319 S. E. (2d) 707, Order on Rehearing (S. C. App. 1984); Ellison v. Heritage Dodge, Inc., 320 S. E. (2d) 716 (S. C. App. 1984), n. 1.

I.

We first address the Trustees’ argument that the circuit judge went beyond the four corners of the trust deed to find the existence of the trust. They claim the Statute of Frauds, which requires the creation of a trust in land to be in writing, prevents the consideration of evidence other than the trust deed itself to establish the trust. See Section 21-27-10, Code of Laws of South Carolina, 1976. We conceive the law to be otherwise.

A trust instrument may consist of more than one writing. Cunningham v. Cunningham, 81 S. C. 506, 62 S. E. 845 (1908); Peele v. LeRoy, 222 N. C. 123, 22 S. E. (2d) 244 (1942). If each writing is signed by the settlor and the writings indicate they relate to the same transaction, the requirements of the Statute of Frauds are satisfied. Cleveland v. Hallett, 60 Mass. (6 Cush.) 403 (1850) (deed executed by settlor to grantee “as trustee;” although no reference to will in deed, court looked to will to ascertain terms of trust); Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 48 (1957); see generally G. Bogert, The Law of Trusts & Trustees, § 90 (rev. (2d) ed. 1978). The Statute is not violated by piecing together the trust instrument from the various documents which were intended to create the trust.

In this case the Codicil is the basic trust instrument. It makes reference to the trust deeds which were executed simultaneously therewith. The Codicil and the deeds are each signed by Mrs. Evans. Read together, they plainly relate to each other and show Mrs. Evans’s intention to create a trust.

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Bluebook (online)
322 S.E.2d 22, 283 S.C. 239, 1984 S.C. App. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramage-v-ramage-scctapp-1984.