Trimmier v. Winsmith

19 S.E. 283, 41 S.C. 109, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 20, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 S.E. 283 (Trimmier v. Winsmith) 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
Trimmier v. Winsmith, 19 S.E. 283, 41 S.C. 109, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 86 (S.C. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Me. Justice Pope.

The- plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant, in the Court of Common Pleas for Spartanburg County, in this State, on a cause of action, a debt, which arose prior to the year 1880,1 which judgment was renewed in 1884, amounting, when renewed, to $771.25. Upon this judgment execution was issued and levied upon three small lots of land of the defendant. At the time of this levy, the defendant was the head of a family residing in this State; such family, so residing here, consisted of defendant and his wife. Defendant had only one child, who, for some years previous, had resided in the State of North Carolina. On defendant’s demand therefor, said three lots of land were set apart to him as a homestead on the 7th day of February, 1885, by the three appraisers duly appointed for such purpose, such action of the appraisers being in writing, under their hands and seals, in [111]*111the presence of two subscribing witnesses; but it was stated iu such writing that the same was so set apart under the act of the General Assembly of this State, passed on the 24th day of December, 1880, and such homestead was to vest thereunder in the defendant, his heirs, and assigns, in accordance with the provisions of that act. These homestead proceedings were recorded in the office of register of mesne conveyances for said Spartanburg County by the plaintiff, who was then clerk of court, and ex officio said register of mesne conveyances, on 17th November, 1885.

In the year 1888, both plaintiff and defendant departed this life. Mrs. C. E. Winsmith, the widow of defendant, continued to hold said three lots as homestead until November, 1889, at which date, under an action by herself as plaintiff and her only child, Mrs. Moore, as defendant, for the sale of the same for partition between the two, the master sold the three lots to Baxter H. Moore, the son-in-law of Mrs. Winsmith and the husband of Mrs. Moore, but no title actually was made until October, 1892.

The executrix &c. of plaintiff demanded of George B. Dean, as sheriff for Spartanburg County, in this State, prior to 13th February, 1893, to levy upon and sell the said three lots to satisfy the aforesaid judgment of her testator. This demand was refused by said sheriff. Thereupon a rule was issued by Judge Norton requiring such sheriff to show cause why he should not be enforced to make such sale. The sheriff made return, embodying therein the facts previously recited, denying that the said lands were liable to sale under such execution. Affidavits were also submitted pro and con. That of B. H. Moore was as follows: “That he was the purchaser of the lots of land sought to be sold herein under the judgment and execution in the above entitled cause, for a valuable consideration, on the day of (November), 1889, when the said lots were sold by the master for Spartanburg County at public outcry, the same being sold as a part of the homestead of John Winsmith, deceased, at the instance of C. E. Winsmith, his widow, and Kate M. Moore (nee Winsmith), his daughter, for division between them as the only heirs at law of the said John Winsmith, deceased. [112]*112That tip to the death of the said John Winsmith, deceased, the said land was a part of the homestead of said deceased, whereon he and his wife, the said C. E. Winsmith, resided; and that after the death of the said John Winsmith, his said widow continued to live on the same for some time, when, on account of the protracted illness of her daughter, Mrs. K. M. Moore, the said Mrs. C. E. Winsmith went to Charlotte, N. C., to be with her daughter, who continued to be in very bad health. That the said Mrs. C. E. Winsmith would go back to see after her affairs upon this homestead property, and kept her furniture there, and received the rents from the same, saying she could not consent to give up her home. Finally she was persuaded by her daughter, Mrs. K. M. Moore, to consent to a partition of the homestead between them, which had descended to them as the only heirs at law of the said John Winsmith, deceased, and to go there and permanently reside with her daughter. This she consented to do, and after the sale in partition aforesaid, disposed of most of her furniture which was then at such homestead, and went to reside with her daughter. That this deponent bought the lots aforesaid, now sought to be sold under execution herein, in good faith at said partition sale, and paid for the same, he being the highest bidder on the same among many others who were bidders for said property at the sale aforesaid, and now holds a deed for the same made to him by the master for Spartanburg Couuty. That the said Mrs. C. E. Winsmith never at any time prior to the action for partition aforesaid abandoned said homestead, but always claimed the same, and was reluctant to consent for said sale, saying that she believed she would outlive her said daughter, on account of the precarious condition of said daughter’s health, and only yielded to such sale after the earnest solicitation of her said daughter, and the said Mrs. Winsmith always claimed and recognized the said land as part of her homestead up to the time of the partition thereof.”

The affidavit of T. E. Trimmier set forth, that by the records of said Spartanburg County, it was shown that Mrs. C. E. Win-smith was the owner, under a deed made to her in 1881, of thirty-four acres of land, whereon was a dwelling house and [113]*113out buildings, adjoining the three lots in controversy, for which thirty-four acres the sum of $3,050 was paid. That the said premises were where John Winsmith and his wife, O. E. Winsmith, resided from the year 1881, and prior thereto, up to the date of his death and until her removal to Charlotte, N. C., by Mrs. Winsmith, his widow. That there has been no time since 1881 when said thirty-four acres were not worth $3,000, and the dwelling house thereon $1,000. The affidavit of H. B. Carlisle, Esq., who was master, alleges, that, although he has made the deeds to said lots of land to B. EL Moore, he had never reported the sale to the court, and such sale, so far as he knows, has never been confirmed. It was admitted at the hearing that Mrs. C. E. Winsmith departed this life in Charlotte, N. C., at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Moore, on the 14th January, 1891, leaving Mrs. Moore as her only heir at law. It was further admitted that the three lots of land now in controversy are contiguous to the thirty-four acres whereon the defendant, Dr. John Winsmith, and Mrs. C. E. Winsmith, his wife, resided, but that said three lots of laud were not parts of the thirty-four acre tract.

All these matters were considered by Judge Wallace, who, on the 9th day of August, 1893, filed his order, wherein “It is ordered and adjudged, that theland levied on is subject to levy and sale under plaintiff’s execution. It is, therefore, ordered, that the rule herein be made absolute.” From this order and the judgment entered thereon, B. EL Moore and Geo. B. Dean, as sheriff, have appealed: 1. In ruling and holding that the land levied upon was subject to levy and sale under the execution of F. M. Trimmier. 2. In not ruling and holding that B. H. Moore had a good and valid title as an innocent purchaser for value from the master, as to the land levied upon, and that the same was not subject to levy under plaintiff’s execution. 3. In not ruling and holding that the assignment of the homestead, duly made and recorded to John Winsmith, vested the same, exempt from levy and sale, in the said John Winsmith and his heirs. 4. In not ruling and holding that B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.E. 283, 41 S.C. 109, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimmier-v-winsmith-sc-1894.