Richardson v. Register

87 S.E.2d 40, 227 S.C. 81, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1955
Docket16989
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 87 S.E.2d 40 (Richardson v. Register) 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
Richardson v. Register, 87 S.E.2d 40, 227 S.C. 81, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 14 (S.C. 1955).

Opinion

Stukes, Justice.

This action resolved itself into an action to try title to nine and one-half acres, largely woodland, which lies to the south of plaintiff’s admitted acreage, and to the north of the defendant. There is no question of adverse possession. It is really a dispute as to the location of the dividing line of the respective farms of the litigants.

The issue was submitted to the jury which returned verdict for plaintiff and the defendant has appealed upon numerous exceptions.

The plaintiff purchased from W. T. Johnson who made deed to him dated November 16, 1943, which contained the following description:

“All that tract of land in Dog Bluff Township, County of Horry, and State of South Carolina, containing 43.8 acres and being bounded on the northwest by lands of *85 Burroughs Johnson, Elbert Johnson, Elizabeth Singleton and Sue Singleton; on the northeast by lands of Geo. J. Holliday estate and the run of Mill Branch; on the southeast by lands of Geo. J. Holliday estate and on the west or southwest by land of Shafter Johnson.
“The said tract of land hereby conveyed is more fully shown on a plat made by A. J. Baker, Surveyor, October 21, 1943, and which plat is made a part of this description.
“This is the same tract of land which was owned by Annie J. Johnson and then by W. T. Johnson at the time of their deaths and conveyed to the grantor by the other heirs of the said persons.”

There was uncertainty of the location of the eastern corner of the southern line of the tract (which is defendant’s northern line) and after plaintiff and Johnson had agreed upon a lump sum price for the land, plaintiff employed a surveyor and he and Johnson accompanied him to make the survey. Also present was one Atkinson who was the employee and representative of the devisees of Holliday who then owned the land to the south, which is now defendant’s. No plat or former deed was available to show the location of the unknown southeastern corner.

Plaintiff testified, in effect, that because he was in a hurry for a plat, which was necessary in the financing of his purchase, he and Mr. Atkinson agreed that the corner would be located where the latter thought it was, and that later, if found to be incorrect, it would be adjusted. Atkinson did not testify, nor does the record show that he was subpoenaed. After the conclusion of the evidence and during the argument defendant’s counsel handed up to the court a doctor’s certificate that Mr. Atkinson was sick; but there was no motion for continuance or any effort to procure Mr. Atkinson’s testimony. Therefore plaintiff’s testimony that there was no definite agreement between him and Atkinson upon the location of the line, in which he was corroborated by another witness who was present at *86 the survey, was uncontradicted and the jury were fully justified in accepting it, which their verdict shows they did.

Several years after plaintiff’s purchase of the Johnson tract to the north, the defendant in 1947 purchased the land to the south of it from the devisees of Holliday who made deed to him which contained the following description :

“All and singular that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying and being in Dog Bluff township, Horry County, State of South Carolina, containing forty nine (49) acres, more or less, one acre having been sold to Townsend Register, and described as follows in deed from M. E. Brown and W. L. Brown to Geo. J. Holliday dated Dec. 30, 1913 and recorded in book XXX, page 309, C. C. C. P. Horry County: ‘Bounded as follows: north by lands of Annie J. Johnson, east and south by lands of Marion Johnson and west by lands of J. R. E. Johnson, being the identical tract of land conveyed to us by Geo. J. Holliday.’ One acre at the southwest corner having been sold to Townsend Register, the present boundaries are: north by Hazard Richardson, east by Holliday Bros. (A. R. Singleton land), south by Townsend Register, and west by L. B. Register and Shafter Johnson.
“Reference is made to the above referred to title, the said tract being described as tract No. 1 in same.”

It is noted that the foreoging description referred to the northern boundary as lands of Annie J. Johnson which was the tract purchased by plaintiff and referred to in the deed to him.

The court appointed two surveyors, one of whom had made the plat for plaintiff, to make a joint survey, which they did, and their plat shows the disputed area with the southeastern corner on an old mill dam, which was referred to in former deeds in the chain of title which were introduced in evidence and at which old witnesses were found upon the court-ordered survey. One of the surveyors testified in be *87 half of plaintiff, the other for the defendant. However, the latter gave the following testimony which supported plaintiff’s case, in reference to the deeds in his claim of title:

“Q. Do the descriptions you have read in the deeds cover the disputed area? A. I’ll say that one deed I read covers the disputed area.
“Q. Which one was that? A. That was the second one I read. The one from the heirs of Annie Johnston to W. T. Johnston.
“Q. It does cover the disputed area? A. Yes, sir.”

Defendant’s first contention is that the plaintiff was bound by his plat of 1943, made for the purpose of 'his purchase, which showed the disputed boundary as claimed by the defendant. But we think that the deed was properly held by the court to be subject to explanation by extrinsic evidence in order to show the intention of the parties. The plat was made a part of the description but the land was also identified as that formerly owned by Annie J. Johnson, which the preponderance of the evidence showed extended to the southern line which was claimed by plaintiff. There was, therefore, a latent ambiguity in the description, which made extrinsic evidence competent.

In Stephens v. Long & Bellamy, 92 S. C. 65, 75 S. E. 530, 533, in which the facts were about the converse of this, the court said: “Appellants contend that the- court should have construed the deed of the Verdier heirs to defendant Long, and have charged the jury that it conveyed the entire ‘Spring Hill’ plantation.. The court could not have done so without invading the province of the jury. The question was one of intention.” The following similar quotation is from Holliday v. Jordan, 112 S. C. 113, 99 S. E. 465, 467: “The description of the land conveyed by the instant deed involves a latent ambiguity, and the jury was entitled to know all the circumstances which surrounded the parties when the deed was executed, the most potent of which was the Legette plat, along with the declaration of Holliday to Jordan when the plat was delivered into Jordan’s hands. And the *88 issue ought to have been submitted to the jury whether the sale and purchase was made under the Legette plat or otherwise.” It was held that in every such case the question is, What did the parties intend when the deed was made?

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E.2d 40, 227 S.C. 81, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-register-sc-1955.