Schoppert v. Gillam

27 S.C. Eq. 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 27 S.C. Eq. 83 (Schoppert v. Gillam) 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
Schoppert v. Gillam, 27 S.C. Eq. 83 (S.C. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Johnston, Ch.

Robert Gillam died in 1814, leaving his wife, Elizabeth, and three children, to wit: William, James and Sarah. Sarah had been married to Philemon Berry Waters ; who died in 1807, and by whom she had three children, Robert, Philemon and Mary B. After the death of her husband, Philemon Berry Waters, Sarah had become the wife of William Sheppard,

In the will of Robert Gillam, executed the 27th of October) 1813, the following dispositions occur, among others not necessary to notice:

[84]*84“ I also give unto my said beloved wife,” (Elizabeth,) “ a negro fellow, named Tom, and a wench, named Linn,- and her child,” &c., “during her natural life : and at her death, to be sold, together with their increase, (if any,) and equally divided between my two sons, William and James, or their heirs, and the surviving children of Philemon Berry Waters, deceased.
“ I also give to my daughter, Sarah Sheppard, in addition to what I have already given her,- twenty dollars.”

This trifling sum is all that is given to Sarah Sheppard in any part of the will: so that the gifts of the testator to her, to which he alludes, must have been made anterior to the will.

Elizabeth, the widow of the testator, died in 1851, at a very advanced age, about ninety years : and the executor, in pursuance of the directions of the will, took possession of the slaves, with their increase, and sold them, and now holds the proceeds.

It is stated in the pleadings, and agreed on, that Philemon Berry Waters never had any other children than the three above named: all of whom were alive at his death, and at the death of the testator, Robert Gillam.

But between the death of the testator and the falling in of the life estate, the two sons, Robert and Philemon Waters had died, leaving (either one or both) issue. The daughter, Mary B. (now the wife of Phillip Schoppert,) alone survived.

Her bill is brought to adjust her interests in the proceeds of the slaves sold by the executor; and to have a settlement made on her. And for these purposes her husband is made a defendant, together with the executor and the heirs of her deceased brothers, &c. All parties in interest are before the Court.

By the decree of the Circuit Court, it was adjudged that she, as sole surviving child of Philemon Berry Waters, was entitled, in exclusion of the children of her brothers Robert and Philemon ; and that the fund should be divided equally between herself, William Gillam and James Gillam, each faking one-third ; and that her third should be settled as prayed.

This is an appeal by the children of the plaintiff’s two brothers ; in which they contend that in the construction of the testa[85]*85tor’s will, the three children of Philemon Berry Waters, who were all living at his (testator’s) death, should have been held to have taken a vested remainder in the slaves, limited upon the death of Elizabeth Gillam ; and that the share of each of those who had died during her life, should have been distributed to his children.

On examination of the words of the will, it is the unanimous opinion of this Court, that the construction put upon them by the Chancellor, on circuit, was correct.

What might have been the effect of the will as to the survi-vorship among the children of Philemon Berry Waters if it had been stated and shewn that he had had other children in his lifetime, and that the three named in the pleadings were the only ones who survived him, it is not necessary to consider. My opinion is, rather, that on proof of such a state of the family, the testator would have been held to have referred to it, and that the three children surviving him (Waters) would have been adjudged to have taken vested interests, as ascertained persons, under the will. If so, their interests would have been transmissible, and the children of Robert and Philemon would have taken their parent’s share.

Parol proof may always be received of the circumstances by which a testator is surrounded at the time he attests his will; and those circumstances will always be allowed an influence in the interpretation of dubious words or phrases in it; though they cannot be resorted to to prove the testator’s intention, apart from his language.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.C. Eq. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoppert-v-gillam-scctapp-1853.