Smith v. Coxe

191 S.E. 422, 183 S.C. 509, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 6, 1937
Docket14478
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 S.E. 422 (Smith v. Coxe) 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
Smith v. Coxe, 191 S.E. 422, 183 S.C. 509, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 130 (S.C. 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Baker.

This is an action to construe the will of the late R. C. Coxe of Marlboro County, to determine what Erancis Edwin Coxe and James Dougal Coxe take thereunder. The action was brought by Mrs. Clara C. Smith (nee Clara H. Covington), as plaintiff, against Francis E. Coxe, J. Dougal Coxe, Mrs. Annie E. Coxe, and Guerry Hudson Smith. William Gause Smith, and Ellen Coxe Smith, representatives of themselves and any other children that may be born to their mother (Mrs. Clara C. Smith), and Connie Maxwell Orphanage. While this case was on appeal to this Court, Clara C. Smith died, and by proper order, Henry S. Covington, as guardian ad litem for the minor defendants, Wil *512 Ham Gause Smith and Ellen Coxe Smith, was substituted as appellant, and allowed to file exceptions to the decree of the Circuit Judge and prosecute the appeal.

Although items fourth and fifth are the only portions of the will to be construed, yet for a better understanding of the possible interest of the other parties to this cause, we direct that items second, third, and sixth of the will be reported.

Mrs. Annie E. Coxe is. living, and it is conceded by all that she has a life estate in all lands of the testator.

The -following are the items of the will sought to be construed:

“Item Fourth. In the event that no child or children are born of our marriage, I gave, devise and bequeath, after the death of my wife, to Francis Edwin Coxe, all of my lands known as the home place lying west of the road from Salem Church to Hunts Bluff and south of Machine Creek, and containing about three hundred acres.”
“Item Fifth. In the event that no child or children are born of our marriage, I give, devise and bequeath, after the death of my wife, to James Dougal Coxe all of my home place lying on the east side of the road from Salem Church to Hunts Bluff and north of Machine Creek, containing about four hundred and fifty acres.”

Paragraph fourth and fifth of the complaint are as follows :

“Fourth: That at the time of the death of the said R. C. Coxe, he was the owner of, and in possession of several tracts of land, among them being a tract of land containing about seven hundred (700) acres, known as the home place which he acquired by inheritance from his father, and a tract containing two hundred and seventy (270) acres, more or less, known as the Egypt Place and a tract containing about thirty-seven (37) acres known as Indigo Field. The defendant, Mrs. Annie E. Coxe, to whom he devised all of *513 his lands for life is now in possession of all of the aforesaid lands.
“Fifth: That the plaintiffs informed and believes and therefore alleges that the defendant, Francis Coxe, is claiming that under the terms of the aforesaid will, he has a vested remainder in the tract of land known as Indigo Field, and that the defendant, Dougal Coxe, is claiming that he has a vested remainder in the Egypt Place and all of the balance of the home place not specifically devised to Francis Coxe. That the defendants, Francis Coxe and Dougal Coxe, acting upon said claim have been attempting to sell the timber upon the said tracts, and have been negotiating with the defendant, Mrs. Annie E. Coxe, for a release of her interest therein. The Plaintiff alleges that the said property including a portion of the home place other than the portion of the home place specifically devised to Francis Coxe and Dougal Coxe will not pass to them under the terms of said will upon the death of Mrs. Annie E. Coxe, but to the plaintiff or her representatives under the provisions of Item Six of said will.”

Paragraph 3 of the answer of the respondents, Francis E. Coxe and J. Dougal Coxe, is as follows:

3. Further answering, they allege that the said R. C. Coxe, who was their uncle, being the brother of their father, died on or about the 20th day' of October, 1916; that at the time of his death he was residing at his home in Marlboro County, State aforesaid, upon the tract of land set apart to him in the partition of the estate of his father and mother, and stated in his will to contain about seven hundred fifty (750) acres, and where he and his wife had resided and made their .home all through their married life, the whole tract so set apart to him as his share as aforesaid being contiguous and lying around his dwelling and comprising his home place, and being designated as his home place in his will and being divided into two parts, substantially equal in value, by the run of Machine Branch *514 and the road leading from Salem Church to Hunt’s Bluff; that by his last will and testament he devised one part thereof; to wit: that lying south of Machine Branch and west of the road to the defendant, Francis Coxe, and the balance thereof to the defendant, Dougal Coxe, both devises being subject to the lifetime rights in the said lands given to his widow, Mrs. Annie E. Coxe, defendant herein. These defendants allege that under and by his will they each take a vested remainder in the respective portions of the said tract of land devised to them as above set forth, and that neither the plaintiff nor her children are entitled to any part thereof. They further allege that if there is any obscurity of expression in the language of the will, which they do not admit, that it was the intention of the testator, after giving a lifetime interest in the said property to his widow, the said Mrs. Annie E. Coxe, to divide the entire remainder interest therein between these two defendants, the said Erancis Coxe taking all that part of the land inherited from his father and mother by the said R. C. Coxe as above referred to, separated from the remainder of Machine Branch and the public road above mentioned; and Dougal Coxe the rest of the said land.”

The land of testator contiguous and lying around the dwelling where he and his wife had resided and made their home throughout their married life, and being the same land which testator received in a partition of his father’s land, had running through it in a west to east direction, and about the center, a branch known as Machine Branch, and running through the lands in almost a north and south direction on the eastern side, a public road leading from Hunt’s Bluff to Salem Church. This public road crosses Machine Branch near the extreme northeastern portion of these lands and continues on in a northern direction.

The record does not disclose upon whose motion, but the case was referred to F. B. Willcox, Esq., an able and outstanding lawyer of this State, located at Florence, S. C., to *515 take the testimony and report his conclusions of law and fact.

Mr. Willcox held references at which considerable testimony was taken to determine two questions: (1) What land constituted the “home place” of R. C. Coxe; and (2) what lands passed to Francis E. Coxe and J. Dougal Coxe under items.fourth and fifth of the will ? Testimony was taken on the theory that there was a latent ambiguity as to the lands comprising the “home place” of the testator, and the lands passing under the terms of the will to Francis E. Coxe and J. Dougal Coxe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 S.E. 422, 183 S.C. 509, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-coxe-sc-1937.