Sibley v. Sibley

70 S.E. 615, 88 S.C. 184, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 17, 1911
Docket7827
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 S.E. 615 (Sibley v. Sibley) 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
Sibley v. Sibley, 70 S.E. 615, 88 S.C. 184, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 111 (S.C. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

In this action, involving the title of a tract of land containing seventy-four acres, the defendants W. Frank Adams and Mary Jane Westbrook claim two-thirds interest in the disputed land as heirs of their father Abram' Adams, who died in 1856, leaving as his heirs at law his widow Eliza Adams, and his children by her, W. Frank Adams and Mary Jane Adams, who afterwards married J. A. Westbrook. The plaintiffs claim •two-thirds interest in the land as the heirs at law of Charles R. Sibley who married the widow of Abram Adams in the latter part of December, 1859, and died on the 17th of November, 1906, leaving as his heirs at law his widow Eliza Sibley and his children by her, C. Marshall Sibley and Rhoda Vaughn. The widow Eliza Sibley has no interest in the controversy; for it is admitted that she is entitled to one-third of the land as widow, whether it be adjudged to belong to the heirs of Adams or to the heirs of Sibley.

The action was in form a suit by the plaintiffs to quiet title, the allegation being that they, with their mother, were in possession of the land, and that the claim set up by the defendants, as heirs of Abram Adams, was a cloud on their title. The cause was tried at the November, 1908, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Chester county, and resulted in favor of the plaintiffs; but the Court set aside the verdict. On the second trial at the April term, 1909, the verdict was for the defendants, and the appeal is from the judgment entered thereon. Some objection was made to the form of action, but this was waived, and it was *187 agreed that the question of title should be tried under the pleadings as they stood.

1 The main question for consideration is whether a verdict for the plaintiffs could follow as a legal result, even assuming all the testimony offered in support of their claim to be true — whether there was any evidence tending to show that Charles R. Sibley ever had title to the land. If there was no such evidence, the errors in the charge set out in the exceptions would be immaterial. The claim of the defendants, the children of Abram Adams, is very simple. No written conveyance to Abram Adams was produced, but the evidence shows beyond dispute that he had bought the land and was living on it with his family when he died in 1856, and that after his death his wife and children lived on it as their own until the second marriage of Mrs. Adams in December, 1859, and after the marriage remained on it for a period long enough to acquire title by adverse possession or the presumption of a grant. If nothing else appeared, of course the title of the heirs of Abram Adams would be complete.

The claim of the plaintiffs is, (1) that Abram Adams' had no title to the land at the time of his death; (2).that if Abram Adams ever had title, Charles R. Sibley acquired it by purchasing the land at a judicial sale on the first Monday of December, 1859; (3) that their father Charles R. Sibley entered into adverse possession in December 1859, and continued1 in possession up to the time of his death in 1906, and that his adverse possession continued for more than twenty years after the children of Abram Adams had reached their majority and. had left the land.

There can be no doubt that the period of the possession of Charles R. Sibley and his wife Eliza Sibley was long enough to give title, not only by adverse possession, but by the presumption of a grant. But in passing upon these allegations of the plaintiffs the important inquiry is whether there is any evidence that Charles R. Sibley entered upon *188 the land under a deed conveying to him the interest of the heirs of Abram Adams, or under any claim adyerse to them, or on the contrary entered in virtue of his marital right to hold and1 enjoy the interest of his wife.

As evidence of a conveyance of the interest of the heirs of Abram Adams to Sibley and1 of his subsequent adverse holding, the plaintiffs introduced a record of partition proceedings in the court of ordinary of Chester county, instituted' by Eliza Adams against her two infant children. In the judgment roll an order dated' November 11, 1859, was found, directing the sale of the land by the sheriff “on the first Monday on December next or on such other sales day as will be most convenient to the parties in interest on a credit of twelve months with interest from day of sale, the purchaser giving bond with good security and a mortgage of the premises if deemed necessary to the ordinary for the payment of the purchase money.” The records of the ordinary’s office and the sheriff’s office afforded no evidence that a sale was ever made. No deed to Sibley was produced, there is no recorded bid, no report of sale, no record of an official deed to the land or of a mortgage for the purchase money, no entry in any official 'book of the receipt or distribution of any proceeds of sale. No witness was produced who was present at the sale or could testify from personal knowledge that the sale was made. Nevertheless, if the case depended on the' inquiry whether there was a sale at which Charles R. Sibley bid off the land, we think there would be an issue of fact to be settled only by the jury; for there was evidence from which it might be inferred that there was a sale and that Sibley bid off the land.

For the purposes of the present discussion, therefore, we must assume that which is most favorable to the plaintiffs, namely, that the sale was made and that Charles R. Sibley bid off the land. Having reached this point, plaintiff’s counsel contend that the lack of any direct evidence that Sibley complied with his bid and received title is supplied *189 by the presumption that the ordinary and sheriff, as public officers, did their duty. But this proposition seems to be clearly unsound. After the land was bid off, compliance with the bid, the condition of obtaining title, was an obligation resting on the bidder alone, and the officers had no duty in his behalf until that condition had been met. Those who claim under a bid at an official sale cannot be allowed to rely on a presumption of compliance with the bid from the mere fact that it was made: presumption of the performance of an obligation does not arise from the making of it. On the 'contrary, the presumption that officers perform their official duties is fatal' to the assertion that a deed of conveyance was made by either of the officers to Charles R. Sibley. Had Sibley ever complied with his bid it would have been the duty of these officers to record the sale, and to take and keep the money or security given for the purchase price, and to pay out the purchase money and keep records of its distribution. The absence of any such record's raises the presumption that the bid was not complied with and that no title was made.

It follows that the claim of the plaintiffs that their father Charles R. Sibley acquired title by conveyance under a judicial sale of the land as the property of the heirs of Abram Adams is without evidence to support it.

2 The Circuit Judge erroneously charged the jury that the infant children of Abram Adams were not bound by the partition proceedings before the ordinary because the record does not give evidence that they were personally served. There was an acceptance of service by the guardian ad litem

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

Related

Horne v. Cox
115 S.E.2d 513 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1960)
Wells v. Coursey
15 S.E.2d 752 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1941)
Floyd v. Page
124 S.E. 1 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 615, 88 S.C. 184, 1911 S.C. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibley-v-sibley-sc-1911.