State v. Pinckney

22 S.C. 484
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 21, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 S.C. 484 (State v. Pinckney) 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
State v. Pinckney, 22 S.C. 484 (S.C. 1885).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

These cases, depending upon the same facts and principles, were heard together and they will be considered together. The attorney general in behalf of the state, filed an information against each of the defendants on September 20, 1882, for intrusion into certain salt marsh lands adjacent to and surrounding Morgan Island, and digging, mining, and removing phosphate rocks and phosphatic deposits from said territory, the property of the state. The defendants each answered, denying that said territory or any part thereof was the property of the state; and pleading “that no right or title in or to the territory described in the information accrued to the state within the space of forty (49) years next before the commencement of this action, and that if any such right or title ever accrued to said state, the same accrued more than forty (40) years before the time of the commencement of this action; and neither the said state nor those from or under whom it claims have received the rents and profits of said territory or of any part thereof within the space of forty (40) years before the commencement of this action.” It was referred to Simeon Hyde, jr., to take the testimony which is in the brief. The Circuit judge makes so clear a statement of the facts, [496]*496,we will not undertake to restate them, except so far as to make the opinion intelligible.

Near the point where the waters of the Coosaw- River mingle with those of St. Helena Sound, they divide, and while one portion goes direct, the other branches off towards the south, and known at first as Parrott’s Greek, lower down assumes the name of Morgan River and flows into the Sound. The small body of land thus isolated is set down in chart No. 435 of the United States coast survey as “Morgan’s Island.” It is very low and flat as indicated by the fact that its superficial area consists of about three hundred and fifty acres of highland and about five thousand of salt marsh, for the most part subject to the ebb and flow of the tides, the mean rise and fall being from six to eight feet, and at full spring tides all the surface is under water, except the highlands and the spots called hammocks. What is known as the highlands are made up by a number of islets interspersed through the marsh; but by far the greater part is at one place on the south shore bounding on Morgan River, and contains about two hundred and fifty acres. This is the only part of the whole-island capable of cultivation, and, as conceded, ivas once the private property of William Fripp, who had a settlement there.

On June 4, 1787, a grant was issued by the state to William Fripp of “a plantation or tract of land, containing one hundred and twenty acres of salt marsh and eight small islands situate in the district of Beaufort, in St. Helena parish, bounding south on St. Helena River, commonly called Morgan River, west on Parrott Creek, north on vacant marsh, eastward on marshes from William Fripp’s land, commonly called Morgan Island, showing such shape, form, and marks as are represented by a plat herein to be annexed,” &c. On July 2, 1787, a few days after the above grant, another was issued by the state to William Fripp, conveying to him “a plantation or tract of land containing thirty acres (being nine small islands), situate in the district of Beaufort, in St. Helena parish; three of the islands bound westwardly on Safe Harbor Creek, the other six on all sides by marsh lands, having such shape, form, and marks as are represented by a plat hereunto annexed,” &c. There Avas no evidence that any other part of the marsh lands of the island had ever been granted, or [497]*497any thing tending to show that down to 1863 any person other than William Fripp, and those who held under him, ever had or claimed to have private property in any part of the said marshes.

On March 10, 1863, during the late war, under and by virtue of an act of Congress “for the collection of direct taxes in insurrectionary districts within the United States,” &c., the commissioners appointed by the general government for that purpose sold and conveyed to one Edward S. Philbrick for the consideration of $255 a tract of land, which in the certificate of the tax sale is described as follows: “the tract of land known as ‘Morgan Island,’ bounded northerly by Coosaw River, southerly by Morgan River, easterly by St. Helena Sound, and westerly by Parrott Creek, containing two hundred and fifty-five acres, more or less,” &c. On January 27, 1865, Edward S. Philbrick sold the land (giving a quit-claim deed) to George Wells for $1,200, who executed a mortgage of the same, in which the land was still described as containing two hundred and fifty acres. The plantation was sold to foreclose the mortgage and purchased for $3,-100 by one Lewis A. Phillips, who, on February 4, 1871, sold it without warranty to C. Eiswold for $6,000. For the first time this deed describes the plantation known as Morgan Island as containing eight hundred acres. Eiswold again conveyed it, on December 20, 1871, to William B. Davis3 and in this deed the plantation is described as containing “four hundred acres, more or less.”

On October 4, 1877, W. B. Davis & Son opened a correspondence with the secretary of state (Hon. R. M. Sims), for a grant of the marsh lands on Morgan Island (4,932 acres), assigning as a reason for desiring the grant, that “parties were trespassing on the marshes, and endangering their stock, and they wished to be entirely certain as owners, before they proceeded to extreme measures.” This correspondence terminated July 16, 1879, by the secretary refusing to issue the grant, under the act of 1878, forbidding “the sale or grant of such lands, covered with water and marshes, as may be situated in that portion of the state, in which are phosphate rocks and phosphatic deposits.” 16 Stat., 811.

On August 29, 1879, William B. Davis sold and conveyed to [498]*498Charles C. Pinckney, jr., all bis interest in a tract of land, described in the deed as follows: “All that tract of land situate in the County of Beaufort and state aforesaid, being the northwestern portion of the island commonly known as ‘Morgan Island’; bounded on the north by Coosaw River, on the east and south by a line beginning on Parrott Creek, forty-five chains to the southward of the mouth of ‘Bass Creek,’ and running north by forty-five degrees east (N. 45° E.) to Coosaw River or St. Helena Sound, and on the west by Parrott Creek, as indicated on the ‘Map of the United States Coast Survey’ of ‘the entrance to Bull and Combahee Rivers,’ No. 435, A. D. 1871, attached to and made a part of this deed, and containing two thousand acre's more or less.” This is the part of marsh lands adjacent to the Morgan Island plantation, upon which the state charges intrusion by C. C. Pinckney, jr., and the portion on the island not thus conveyed, is that upon which the state charges intrusion by the other defendant, William B. Davis, who claims to be the owner of the whole remainder of the island.

The cause came on for a hearing before Judge Wallace, who held that the state has title to all the ungranted lands within her borders, and that the presumption of her title is a rule of evidence that applies whenever title and jurisdiction are asserted by the pleadings for the state, and when a grant from the state, either actual or presumed, is set up by an individual, and in either case is sufficient to put the defendant to his defence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.C. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pinckney-sc-1885.