Van Ness v. Schachte

141 S.E. 721, 143 S.C. 429, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 9, 1928
Docket12371
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 S.E. 721 (Van Ness v. Schachte) 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
Van Ness v. Schachte, 141 S.E. 721, 143 S.C. 429, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 28 (S.C. 1928).

Opinion

*434 The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Stabeer.

This question arose out of a dispute with respect to a dividing line between two' adjoining lots of land, located on the west side of Smith Street in the City of Charleston. The facts are somewhat involved, but we shall endeavor to make such statement of them as will give a clear understanding of the controversy.

The Enterprise Real Estate Compairy (hereinafter referred to as the Enterprise Company), from which both parties to this action claim as a common source of title, prior to 1912 bought several lots of land in the City of Charleston, which included the lots now owned by the plaintiff and the defendant, respectively. The lands purchased by the Enterprise Company were a part of the lands formerly owned by one Thomas Bennett. In 1855 Bennett had Charles Parker, City Surveyor, tO' make a plat of his lands, which is referred to herein as the Parker plat, and a sketch of which is shown below. We are concerned in the present case only with Lots 80, 81 and 82, as shown on this plat. It will be observed that these lots lie to the west side of Smith Street; their total frontage being shown thereon as 138 feet and 6 inches.

*435 In 1870, in the settlement of the state of Thomas Bennett, William Hume, surveyor, at the direction of the Court, made a plat of the Bennett estate lands, which, while not so extensive, is the same as the earier plat of Parker.

Lot 80, known as the Parker lot, was conveyed to the Enterprise Company by Anna Parker, in 1907, in two parcels, described in her deed as having a frontage on Smith Street of 25 and 27 feet, respectively. Lot 81, with a frontage of 51 feet on Smith Street, and known as the Teskey lot, was conveyed to the Enterprise Company by Robert Teskey, by deed dated July 20, 1907. Lot 82, with a frontage of 36 feet on Smith Street, and known as the Kessel lot, was conveyed to the Enterprise Company by the devisees of John Kessel by deed dated March 31, 1910. These three lots were all the lands acquired by the Enterprise Company of the lands formerly owned by Thomas Bennett, as shown on the Parker plat. It will be observed that the aggregate frontage of these- three lots on Smith Street, according to the conveyances to the i Enterprise Company, is 139 feet, being 6 inches more than their aggregate frontage as shown on the Parker and Hume plats. This difference is found in the conveyance of Anna Parker to the Enterprise Company of lot 80, her deed to that company showing a frontage of that lot on Smith Street of 52 feet, while the Parker and Hume plats show it to be 51 feet and 6 inches.

The Enterprise Company, after acquiring these lots, conveyed to Mary M. Duffy, in 1911, the northern portion of lot 80, with a-frontage on Smith Street of 35 feet, and referred to in the conveyance to her as being a part of the lot known as No. 80 on the Hume plat.

On October 8, 1912, the Enterprise Company had A. A. Everett, surveyor, to survey and make a plat of a portion of their remaining lands, beginning at the southern boundary line of the lot purchased by Mary M. Duffy. This plat *436 was recorded on October 8, 1912, and a sketch of it is shown below.

With respect to this plat, we are concerned only with lots 1 and 2 and the court fronting on Smith Street. Each of these lots is given a frontage of 28 feet and the court 14 feet, making a total frontage of 70 feet. The northern boundary line of lot 2 and the southern boundary line of lot 1 were each shown thereon as marked by a fence. The *437 aggregate frontage of these lots, Numbers 1 and 2, and the court, as shown on the Everett plat, taken with the frontage of the lot conveyed to Mary Duffy, would include, not only the entire frontage of the Parker and Teskey lots as shown on the Parker and Hume plats, but would extend two feet and six inches south beyond the northern boundary line of the Kessel lot (No. 82), taking a part of that lot. After the Everett plat had been made, the Enterprise Company conveyed to Carry M. Ostendorff, October 9, 1912, lot 2 as shown on that plat. In March, 1913, the Enterprise Company conveyed to Gustav Doscher lot 1, and in May, 1916, Doscher conveyed this lot to his wife. Its southern boundary line, which is the northern boundary line of-the plaintiff’s lot, is the one in dispute. In the conveyance to Gustav Doscher, the lot is described as “being a portion of the premises conveyed by Robert Teskey to Enterprise Real Estate Company by deed dated the 20th of July, 1907,” and-the southern boundary is given as “lands of Enterprise Real Estate Company, formerly of the estate of John Kessel.” The Everett plat is referred to as showing the shape, marks, dimensions, and boundaries of the property conveyed.

At the time of the purchase of this lot by Doscher, in 1913, Mrs. Eloise Van Ness, the plaintiff in this action, was in possession, under a written contract . for its purchase from the Enterprise Company, of the lot occupied by her, which lies to the south of, and adjoins, the Doscher lot. This contract was never recorded. The Enterprise Company conveyed the lot to Mrs. Van Ness March 11', 1916. The fence shown on the Everett plat as marking .the southern boundary line of the Doscher lot was, according to the testimony, located on a line with the eaves of the Van Ness house about 12 inches north of the house line.

After Doscher purchased his lot, in repairing the line fence between the two lots to the rear of the plaintiff’s *438 house, he placed the post at the house corner flush with the house, later building a garage which extended over a few inches on the land formerly on the Van Ness sidfe of the fence. Subsequently, when the front line fence needed repairs, Doscher made them, having an understanding with Mrs. Van Ness that each party would pay one-half the cost. In making these repairs, he moved the fence south about 12 inches, and made it run flush with the Van Ness house. Afterwards, a coping was built in front of each house up to the fence; the Doscher coping being built about one year prior to the Van Ness coping.

Subsequently, in April, 1921, Walter B. Schachte, a former defendant in this case, purchased the Doscher lot. In 1924, when the front fence again needed repairs, Mrs. Van Ness desired to have it put back to its former place— about 12 inches north of the house line—but Schachte refused to recognize the old fence line as being the true boundary line between the lots, with the result that both parties employed surveyors, who failed to agree as to where the line should be placed, whereupon the parties resorted to litigation for a determination of their rights.

While litigation was pending, the defendant, Walter B. Schachte, died, and the action was revived in the name of Marion B. Schachte, his widow and devisee.

The plaintiff alleges trespass in the building of the fence and garage on her lands by Gustav Doscher, and in the continuing of same upon her lands by the defendant, who refused to remove them upon her request.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 S.E. 721, 143 S.C. 429, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-ness-v-schachte-sc-1928.