Tedder v. Tedder

93 S.E. 19, 108 S.C. 271, 2 A.L.R. 438, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 4, 1917
Docket9822
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 19 (Tedder v. Tedder) 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
Tedder v. Tedder, 93 S.E. 19, 108 S.C. 271, 2 A.L.R. 438, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 241 (S.C. 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

The cause is in equity to set aside sundry deeds to land, made in fraud of section 3454 of the Code of Daws. It involves some 300 acres of land situate near Society Hill, and' said to be of the present value of some $20,000. There are, in fact, two actions, but they were tried together, and they come so here. The plaintiffs in the two actions, except S. W. Tedder, are the confessed lawful children and *274 grandchildren of William Tedder, Sr., by his wife, Gemimah. The defendants, in the two actions, except Carrigan, are children and grandchildren of William Tedder, Sr., by a woman called Adeline, confessedly of negro blood, and their legitimacy is denied and affirmed. William Tedder, Sr., died in 1905, the actions were begun the next year thereafter, and they have just reached this Court, Gemimah, the confessed lawful wife of William, died in 1864 or 1865. Betwixt that period of time and 1870, the exact period is not certainly fixed, Adeline commenced to- live with William, Sr., and their children were born after that period. Adeline had been a slave of Gemimah, and, as before stated, she was confessedly of mixed negro blood. Adeline died “about 18 years ago,” one of the witnesses said. Though the testimony does not fix in what calendar year the death occurred, it must have been about 1890, after 20 years’ cohabitation with William. Betwixt the years 1888 and 1905, William, Sr., conveyed by deed the lands in issue, in sundry parcels, to his four sons, William, Jr., Samuel, James and Gus. To several of William’s children by Adeline he made no- conveyance of any part of his land. The children by Gemimah got none. By the said conveyances William, Jr., got in four parcels and by two deeds 170, acres; Sam got 45 acres; James got 30 acres, and Gus got in two parcels and by two deeds 81 acres — all told 326 acres. The first action is brought under section 3454 of the Code of Laws; and the plaintiffs seek thereunder to vacate the said several deeds: (1) Because there was no consideration paid for them; and (2) because the aforementioned grantees are alleged to be the bastard children of William, Sr., by Adeline, and the conveyance to them was voidable under the statute, except to the extent of one-fourth of the value of the property. The second action assails the aforementioned deeds by William, Sr., tO' William, Jr., upon the ground that they were obtained by -the son from the father through the fraud, misrepresentation, and imposition of the son upon the father. *275 The master, without discussion, found all the issues for the defendants in both cases, and recommended a dismissal of the complaints. The Circuit Court, in formal orders, confirmed the reports of the master.

There are 15 exceptions by the plaintiffs in the first case, and 5 exceptions by the plaintiffs in the second case. These we shall not take up in order; but we shall mayhap compass all the determinative issues in the case. We think they are these, and we state them in dependent order, to wit: (1) Were William and Adeline husband and wife when their children were born? (2) Is the action against James and Gus barred by the statute of limitations? (3) Was the deed from William, Sr., to- William, Jr., procured to be madé by the fraud of the grantee? (4) Should the deeds be canceled for the nonperformance of the condition upon which they were given, to wit, the sons’ promise to pay the Carrigan mortgage? (5) Did William, Jr., and Sam pay a valuable consideration for the deeds they got? There are exceptions to the disallowance of testimony tendered by the plaintiff; but the issues they make are secondary, and we think not necessary to a right decision of the cause. ’

The dominating question in the case is the first stated. We are distinctly satisfied that upon that question the master and Circuit Judge have arrived at a wrong conclusion. We are mindful, too, of the law that the burden is upon the plaintiffs at the outstart to prove by a preponderance of the testimony that William and Adeline were not husband and wife. The counsel for the defendants have not asserted that there was a formal marriage in an instant of time; all they assert is that the circumstances prove that the marriage relationship existed in some time. One of the counsel cites seven such circumstances, to wit:

“That William Tedder, Sr., held out Adeline as his wife to McMillan and to Thos. H. Coker and T. H. Soippayrac; that he lived with her as his wife; that they enjoyed the same habitation and the same board; that they reared the *276 same children together under the same name, and in the same household and as his family; that he treated Adeline as his wife, and she treated him as her husband; that the children were treated as members of the family as a unit; that they lived there many years as husband and wife, in sickness and health, until death parted them.”

But most of these circumstances might surround an immoral cohabitation.

1 The difference between marriage and concubinage in the circumstances stated rests in the intent of the cohabiting parties; the physical and temporal accompaniments of the cob.abita.tion may be the same in both cases, but the intent in the two cases is widely apart always. The intent in marriage is usually evidenced by a public and unequivocal declaration of the parties, but that is not necessary; the intent may exist though never public and formally declared; nevertheless the intent' must exist. The intent in marriage consists of living together by agreement of a man and. woman as husband and wife according to what we know to be the- law of the land, and according to what we believe to be the law of God. The intent in concubinage consists in a man and woman living together in the contrary fashion. . It is true that when the intent has not been formally and publicly declared, as it manifestly was not in the instant case, it may yet rest in circumstances. See Fryer v. Fryer, 9 S. C. Eq. (Rich. Eq. Cas.) 98; Stringfellow v. Scott, 9 S. C. Eq. (Rich. Eq. Cas.) 109, note; Lucken v. Wichman, 5 S. C. 413; Blackburn v. Crawford, 3 Wall. 195, 18 L. Ed. 186; 2 Kent (14th ed.) bottom page 120, note.

2 There are two circumstances which, when established by the testimony, shift to the defendants the burden of proving that William and Adeline were husband and wife. They are: (1) The negro blood of the woman; and (2) the immoral inception of the association. It may be, as the respondents contend, that the law of the State did not prohibit the marriage of a white man to a col *277 ored woman at the particular period of time when the cohabitation began. But though that be true, yet the presumption of fact was then, and is now, that a white man will not marry a colored woman. That is true because the common and unbroken practice of our society since the foundation of the State has been against such alliance. See Lloyd v. Rawl, 63 S. C. 244, 41 S. E. 312; Rutledge v. Tunno, 69 S. C. 406, 48 S. E. 297; 2 Kent (14th ed.) note, bottom page 379. This presumption of fact, then, standing against a marriage, the burden is shifted on those who allege a marriage to' prove it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 19, 108 S.C. 271, 2 A.L.R. 438, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tedder-v-tedder-sc-1917.