Roundtree v. Roundtree

2 S.E. 474, 26 S.C. 450, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 474 (Roundtree v. Roundtree) 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
Roundtree v. Roundtree, 2 S.E. 474, 26 S.C. 450, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 69 (S.C. 1887).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McIver.

Sometime in the year 1860 William Roundtree, late of Barnwell County, in the State aforesaid, departed this life, having previously, to wit,-on January 12,1858, duly made and executed his last will and testament. At the time the will was executed the testator had a wife and seven children. He had previously lost four children, two of whom died [459]*459childless and unmarried, and the other two having each left one child — one a son and the other a daughter. One of testator’s sons, James W. Roundtree, who wrote the will, and rvho had at the time seven children, which was known to the testator, died about five or six days before his father, leaving eight children, but for prudential reasons the testator was kept in ignorance of his son’s death until a very few days before his own death.

By the first clause of his will the testator gave to his wife, Jane Roundtree, certain slaves, together with the tract of land on which he resided, and also the Killingsworth tract, “and as much of the stock, horses, mules, cattle, and hogs and provisions, together with the -house furniture and plantation tools, as she may want for her own use during her natural life; and at her death it is my will and desire that it all shall be equally divided, share and share alike, between my surviving children.” By the 2d clause he gave to his granddaughter, Teresa Wood, the child of his pre-deceased daughter, a negro girl, with the 'provision that “should she die leaving no children, the said negro girl, with her increase, if any, to revert back and be equally divided between my surviving children.” By the 3d clause he gave to his grandson, John B. Roundtree, a son of his predeceased son, a negro boy, with a similar provision, in case of his death without children, to that contained in the next preceding clause.

By the 4th clause he says : “It is my will and desire, immediately after my death, that the whole of the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, shall be equally divided between my surviving children, share and share alike.”. By another paragraph of the same clause, he declares it to be his will that his wife, Jane, his granddaughter, Teresa Wood, and his grandson, John B. Roundtree, shall have nothing more than what is given to them respectively in the first, second, and third clauses above written. By another paragraph of the same clause he declares, “finally, it is my will and desire, that if any of my children should die leaving no issue, the property they receive from my estate shall revert back and be equally divided between my surviving children.” And after providing that his son, James W. Roundtree, should receive and manage the share [460]*460of his son Augustus until he attained the age of twenty-one years, he, in the last paragraph of the 4th clause, appoints his executors, and says.: “I desire that they shall make the division of my estate, as written above, which division, when made, shall be final.”

It is stated in the Circuit decree that very soon after the decease of the testator, the residue of his estate was divided into seven equal parts, one of which was allotted to the children of James W. Roundtree, who had pre-deceased the testator by a very few days; but this fact does not appear in the “agreed statement,” upon which the case seems to have been heard.

During the life-time of the testator’s widow, to' wit, in 1869, one of the testator’s daughters, Martha, who had intermarried with one Meyer, departed this life, leaving as her heirs at law her husband and seven children, who are parties plaintiffs in this action. During the same period, but at what time precisely does not appear, the interest of Augustus M. Roundtree, in the remainder of his father’s estate, after the termination of the life-' estate of his mother, was sold by the sheriff under execution and bought by one Dicks, who, having died, his heirs at law are made parties, claiming the share of said Augustus under the sheriff’s deed, which, however, was not recorded within the time prescribed by law, and not until after the assignment by Augustus to the defendant, Weathersbee, hereinafter mentioned, was executed.

The life-tenant, Mrs. Jane Roundtree, having died some time in September, 1886, the executors, under the impression that the will conferred upon them the power so to do, proceeded to sell the land devised to the widow for life, for the purpose of making a division thereof, as directed by the will, and this sale, by the consent of all parties concerned, has been confirmed by an order in this cause, in which all the equities are reserved and transferred from the land to the fund arising from the sale. Soon after this sale was made by the executors, to wit, on December 7, 1886, Augustus M. Roundtree assigned to the- defendant, Weathersbee, all his right, title, and interest in that portion of the estate of his father, which was given to his mother for life, and directed the executors to pay over said interest to said [461]*461Weathersbee. A copy of this assignment is set out in the “Case,” from which it appears that though the attesting clause seems to have been written with the intention of its being under seal — “Witness my hand and séal” — yet there is no seal placed opposite the name of the assignor, and there is but one subscribing witness.

The main object of this action, which was commenced on December 23, 1885, is to obtain the decree of the court as to the proper construction of the first clause of the will of the said William Roundtree, as well as to determine the conflicting claims of the heirs of Dicks, and the defendant, Weathersbee, to the interest of Augustus.

Without undertaking to give even an abstract of the elaborate reasoning which conducted the Circuit Judge to the conclusions which he adopted, his whole decree being set out in the “Case,” it is sufficient to state here the conclusions of law which he reached to which error is imputed by the several grounds of appeal: 1st. He concluded that the children of James W. Roundtree, as a class, were entitled to the share in the remainder, to which their father would have been entitled if he had survived the testator. 2d. That the heirs of Mrs. Meyer were also entitled to the share of the remainder to which she would have been entitled. 3d. That the heirs of Dicks were entitled to the interest of Augustus M. Roundtree under the sheriff’s deed.

From this decree the defendants, Weathersbee and Augustus M. Roundtree, appeal upon the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be more specifically stated at this stage of the opinion, as the controlling propositions of law upon which these grounds rest will be hereinafter stated and considered. The heirs of Dicks, by their appeal, only impute error to the Circuit Judge in his first conclusion above stated, upon grounds which will hereinafter be considered. The children of James W. Roundtree, while not appealing from the decree, give notice, according to the proper practice, that the judgment should be sustained upon an additional ground to those upon which it is rested by the Circuit Judge, to wit: “That it appears from the 4th clause of the will that the testator intended, should any of his [462]*462children die in his life-time leaving issue, such issue were to be substituted for and take instead of such child dying.”

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 474, 26 S.C. 450, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roundtree-v-roundtree-sc-1887.