Santee River Hardwood Co. v. Hyman

44 F. Supp. 857, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2932
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1942
DocketC. A. 720
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 F. Supp. 857 (Santee River Hardwood Co. v. Hyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santee River Hardwood Co. v. Hyman, 44 F. Supp. 857, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2932 (D.S.C. 1942).

Opinion

TIMMERMAN, District Judge.

This cause is before me to hear the motion of the plaintiff “for an order referring this cause to a master to take the testimony and report it to the Court.”

The plaintiff asserts ownership and possession of a certain tract of land situate in Florence County, South Carolina, and within the jurisdiction of this court, containing '2,172 acres, more or less, which, according to plaintiff’s allegations, is bounded on the “West by lands of the estate of N. S. Gibson and George H. Hyman,” the last of whom is the defendant herein.

The plaintiff traces its title to this tract of land “by an unbroken chain of title to a general warranty deed from N. S. Gibson and J. K: Gibson to Benjamin F. Newcomer, dated March 2, 1877 and recorded March 6, 1877 in Book H. H., page 30, office of the Clerk of Court for Marion County”, and then alleges that the defendant acquired title to lands lying to the west of plaintiff’s said tract under the will of the said N. S. Gibson, one of plaintiff’s predecessors in title.

The plaintiff alleges that the dividing line between it and the defendant was established and marked by a blazed line during the life of defendant’s testator, N. S. Gibson, which line, “so established and marked, has been recognized and followed ever since”; and that the defendant is groundlessly “asserting that the line so established and marked on the ground is not the true line of division between the lands of plaintiff and of said defendant”, and is asserting a claim to a ’’'iarge section” of plaintiff’s property.

Further it is alleged, in paragraph 6 of the complaint, that “the defendant has actually trespassed upon plaintiff’s property; has annoyed, harassed and embarrassed the plaintiff in conducting its logging operations on its property; has cast a cloud on plaintiff’s title to a considerable portion of its property; and has thus seriously interfered with plaintiff in the use and enjoyment thereof, and in securing the full market value thereof.”

In the 7th and last paragraph of the complaint, the plaintiff avers “That the aforesaid acts on the part of the defendant are continuous and repetitious, and the plaintjff has no adequate remedy at law to prevent them; and unless this Court, sitting in equity, affords it relief by injunction, it will suffer irreparable loss and damage.”

The defendant answered admitting, inter alia, that the plaintiff owns the tract of land claimed by it, but denying that the boundary line between his and the plaintiff’s land is as alleged in the complaint. Specifically the defendant alleges “that the blazed line which plaintiff sets out in paragraphs 4 and S of the complaint was recently made either by the Atlantic Coast Lumber Corporation or by the plaintiff as [858]*858he is informed, and is not the true line of division between the lands of plaintiff and defendant, but on the contrary, that the true line is the high water mark of the Great Pee Dee River.”

Furthermore, the defendant denies the allegations of paragraphs six and .seven of the complaint quoted above. In other words, the defendant contends that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law.

In his answer the defendant also sets out the chain of title of the plaintiff, showing that Newcomer conveyed the tract now owned by plaintiff to C. A. Woods and S. U. Davis, who in turn conveyed the same to the Atlantic Coast Lumber Corporation, which corporation is the grantor of the plaintiff, and that the deed from the Lumber Corporation to plaintiff was executed December 11, 1941.

Further the defendant alleges that the deed from the Gibsons to Newcomer, executed in 1877, only conveyed “all of the swamp lands designated as such on a plat of a tract of land surveyed by Hugh God-bolt, deputy surveyor, on the first day of October, 1839, and designated on a plat certified by George W. Earle, December 10, 1866 as High Swamp 1783 acres, High Swamp 436 acres, Low Swamp 1649 acres and Low Swamp 614 acres”, and that the deeds from Newcomer to Woods and Davis and from Woods and Davis to the Atlantic Coast Lumber Corporation described said premises in substantially the same language.

According to the defendant’s contention the western boundary of plaintiff’s tract of land, as fixed in the deed of the Gibsons to Newcomer, “is the high water mark of the Great Pee Dee River, and not the blazed line mentioned in the complaint, which blazed line is altogether, or in most instances, on a bluff on the land of the defendant and well above any swamp <^f any description.”

In his cross-complaint the defendant repeats the substance of the foregoing allegations, and further alleges that either the plaintiff or its immediate predecessor in title, Atlantic Coast Lumber Corporation, had erroneously caused the alleged “blazed line” to be marked on the ground as a boundary between the two properties at about the time plaintiff took title from the Lumber Corporation; that “the high water mark of the Great Pee Dee River is the true boundary”, and that the line attempted to be established by the plaintiff, or the Lumber Company, is “far to the west of said high water mark and in many instances ran well up on a bluff on land belonging to defendant.”

Then follows allegations to the effect that the plaintiff has trespassed upon defendant’s land, cast a cloud on his title thereto and seriously interfered with the use and enjoyment thereof. These claimed' wrongs are alleged to be “continuous and repetitious.” The defendant prays that the land line be established and that the plaintiff be enjoined from trespassing on his lands.

The plaintiff, replying to the cross-action of the defendant, denies certain allegations thereof, admits others and claims that the “high water mark of the Great Pee Dee River” is the same as the alleged “blazed line.”

The case discloses a typical land line dispute. The issue raised is narrow. By its reply to the cross-complaint of the defendant, the plaintiff admits that the true boundary line between the properties in question is the high water mark of the Great Pee Dee River. Therefore the primary issue for settlement herein is the correct location of the high water mark. The answer to other questions will follow, as a matter of course, the settlement of the boundary dispute. The other questions must await the settlement of this issue.

It is apparent from the pleadings that the contending parties have different ideas as to where lies the tr.ue boundary line. At least one of them is wrong. The land lying between the two contended for lines is in dispute, — each side claims it.

The plaintiff contends that the defendant is not entitled to a jury trial because he admits that he and the plaintiff claim from a common source; and that no issue of paramount title can arise where the parties claim from a common source of title. I cannot subscribe unqualifiedly to this doctrine. Here both the plaintiff and the defendant are claiming the same strip of land, alleged by the plaintiff to- be “a large section of property.” Obviously some one has the paramount title, or the highest ranking claim, to this large section of property. As I read the pleadings, each of the parties is asserting such a title or claim, regardless of the source of title.

It is true that in certain cases it has been held that there is no issue of paramount title for settlement by a jury where the [859]*859■contending parties claim under the same written instrument, as a deed or will. Such a case was Wolf v. Hayes, 161 S.C. 293, 159 S.E. 620.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marshall v. Pence
Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 2005

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 F. Supp. 857, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santee-river-hardwood-co-v-hyman-scd-1942.