Rhett v. Jenkins

25 S.C. 453, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 3, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 S.C. 453 (Rhett v. Jenkins) 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
Rhett v. Jenkins, 25 S.C. 453, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 160 (S.C. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

MR. Justice McGowan.

This was an action for the recovery of a lot in the city of Columbia, described in the complaint. As well as can be collected from the brief the following outline of facts appeared: That Richard Holmes, a man of color, died in March, 1870, in possession of the said lot, where he had lived for many years. He left of force his last will and testament, by which he devised one moiety of said premises to his wife, Bella, and the other moiety in trust for his son William and his children. After his death, Bella and William remained in possession of their respective portions under the will. William died in 1878, and his wife, Amanda, and her children continued to occupy their moiety. In 1868 James D. Tradewell recovered a judgment against Richard Holmes. In 1378 one Thoroughgood Thornton recovered a judgment against James D. Tradewell, as executor of the will of Richard Holmes, and under executions issued upon these judgments the premises in question were sold by the sheriff in 1885, and bid off by the plaintiffs, who received sheriff’s titles and broughc this action to recover the lot. The defendants answered denying that Richard Holmes was ever [456]*456seized and possessed of the premises, as he was a slave until emancipation in 1865; also denying that the will was of any force and effect as far as the devise to them of the premises was concerned, or that they possessed themselves of the premises under the aforesaid will of Holmes. And in addition, Bella Holmes interposed the statute of limitations. The plaintiffs did not undertake to prove title in Richard Holmes, but showed his continuous adverse possession of the premises for upwards of forty years, of which time the last five years prior to his death he was a freeman.

The cause came on for trial before Judge Hudson and a jury. Under the charge the jury found for the defendants. There were requests to charge on both sides, some of which were charged as presented, some in modified form, and some refused, as fully appears in the exceptions printed in the brief; but it will not be necessary to consider more than the 1st, 5th, 7th, and 8th, which are as follows:

1. “Because his honor, the presiding judge, erred in charging the jury: ‘If the jury believe from the evidence that Richard Holmes is the common source, and that the said Richard Holmes was a slave, and that he died on March 11, 1870, plaintiffs cannot recover unless they (the plaintiffs) have shown that the said Holmes acquired title since 1865.’

5. “Because his honor, the presiding judge, erred in refusing to charge the jury, as requested by the plaintiffs, ‘that if the jury believe from the evidence that the defendants are in possession under Richard Holmes, either as devisees or heirs at law, then the jury must find for the plaintiffs, unless the defendants have shown an independent title in themselves by connecting themselves with a grant or proving that which presumes a grant.’

7. “That ‘if the jury find the fact to be that Richard Holmes had no title to this land except the five years’ possession from 1865 to 1870, then the plaintiffs acquired nothing by the sheriff’s deed, and had no right to recover against the defendants.’

8. “That ‘a naked trespass can neither be cast by descent, nor devised by will, nor acquired by levy and sale under judgment against the trespassers.’ ”

It will be seen that the leading idea of the charge was, that [457]*457the plaintiffs could not recover unless they proved that Richard Holmes, the defendant in execution, had good legal title. This may be necessary in actions brought by purchasers at sheriff’s sale against perfect strangers to the judgment debtor, and who do not claim in any way through or under him. But the rule is certainly different where the action is brought against the judgment debtor himself. In such case it is well settled that “proof of the judgment, execution, and sheriff’s deed shall be received as conclusive evidence of title until the defendant shows a better.” The question here is what is the rule when the action is brought against the devisees of the judgment debtor in possession in accordance with and under his will. The subject as applied to this case is not entirely free from obscurity, but it strikes us that the view of the judge overlooked the consequences of both parties claiming from the same source, and also the force and effect of a sale under judgment as to the parties to that judgment and their privies.

There is no doubt as to the general rule that in an action for land the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his own title and not the weakness of his adversary’s. But there are exceptions, cases in which the plaintiff is not required to trace his title back to a grant. One class of these is where both parties claim from the same source of title; in which, as we understand it, the fact that the plaintiff has traced his title back to a source from which the defendant also claims stands in the place of further proof of title, at least prima facie. We do not know that the rule is anywhere better stated than by Judge Withers in the case of Pyles v. Reese, 4 Rich., 558: “But the obligation is not without exception. Where the parties litigant derive title from the same source, no end of justice is to be attained by tracing beyond. Hence as between lessor and lessee the rule is universal ; the latter having gained possession by his acknowledgment is estopped from his denial of the title under which he entered. How stands the case when one enters as a purchaser under the title of another, and a contest subsequently arises between the vendor and vendee ? * * * Under the authority of adjudged cases we are of opinion a plaintiff is never compelled to go further back than the source whence the parties before the [458]*458court derive title, if the source is the same. * * * That ‘moral policy of the law,’ of which Chief Justice Marshall spoke, is well vindicated in such a. case by holding that prima facie he who enters upon land as a purchaser, thereby admits the title under which he enters to be good. I would refer to the cases of Blight v. Rochester, 7 Wheat., 535; Thomas & Ashby v. Jeter and Abney, 1 Hill, 380; and Hill v. Robertson, 1 Strob., 1. The opinion now pronounced is but the reiteration of principles held and affirmed in these cases,” &c. And we might add several other cases in our own reports. Martin v. Ranlett, 5 Rich, 541; Geiger v. Kaigler, 15 S. C., 269, &c.

According to this clear judgment, if we consider the defendants as purchasers for value from Richard Holmes, they could not put the plaintiffs to proof of the title of the said Richard; and, surely, they have no higher rights, as mere volunteers, devisees, who have no estate until the debts of the ancestor are paid, and as privies are bound by his sale either made by himself or through the sheriff. We do not understand that this conclusion rests upon the technical doctrine of estoppel, for the defendants are allowed, if they can, to prove an independent title in themselves; but it is simply the logical result of the defendants’ claiming under the same title with that of the plaintiffs, considered in the light of the principle that one is held to admit the title under which he enters. If in such case the plaintiffs were still required to prove title in the common source, we are unable to see why the rule was ever adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.C. 453, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhett-v-jenkins-sc-1886.