Wheeler v. Wheeler

96 S.E. 714, 111 S.C. 87, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1918
Docket10087
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 714 (Wheeler v. Wheeler) 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
Wheeler v. Wheeler, 96 S.E. 714, 111 S.C. 87, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 113 (S.C. 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

The title to a tract of swamp land is involved in this action. Plaintiff alleges that he and the defendant, S. M. *91 Wheeler, are seized and in possession of a larger tract, described in the complaint’ which includes the land in dispute, and that the other defendants (the Kennedys) claim some interest.therein, but have none; and he prays, that it be so adjudged, and that the land be partitioned between him and S. M. Wheeler.

Some of the Kennedy defendants answered, denying the title and possession of the Wheelers as to that portion of the tract which lies in Pudding Swamp, and claiming that they have both the title thereto and possession thereof. They also pleaded the statutes of limitations, and title by adverse possession and estoppel, the estoppel pleaded being an agreement between their ancestor and predecessor in title and his grantee (under whom the Wheelers claim) that the edge of the swamp should be the line between them, and their ancestor’s and their possession of the swamp land ever since under that agreement. For convenience, we shall call the Wheelers the plaintiffs, and the answering defendants the defendants.'

W. T. Kennedy, the ancestor of the defendants, is admitted to be the common source of title. In 1880 he conveyed to T. G. Robinson a tract thus described:

“On the east side of Pudding Swamp, containing four hundred acres, bounded north by Mrs. S. E. Johnson, east by W. T. Kennedy, south by J. E. Kennedy and west by Pudding Swamp.”

It appears that J. W. Kennedy also conveyed the same tract to Robinson by a separate deed, containing a similar description of it.

The land in dispute lies in Pudding Swamp and west of the edge thereof. Plaintiff contends that as a matter of law, without regard to extraneous circumstances, the above description conveyed to Robinson title to all the land in the swamp to the middle run thereof, and that parol evidence tending to contradict, vary or control the legal construction of the description was erroneously admitted. Evidence was *92 admitted that at the time of the conveyance the tract conveyed was surveyed and located, and a plat thereof was made by J. E. McElveen, a surveyor, and that by the direction of the parties he made the edge of Pudding Swamp the line on the west; that he did not run the lines into the swamp, but stopped at the edge of the swamp, where he set up stakes; and that the tract so surveyed contained 400 acres, the quantity mentioned in the deed, without including any swamp land. W. T. Kennedy and T. G. Robinson were both dead at the time of the trial, and so was McElveen, the surveyor; but several witnesses, among them a son of Robinson, testified that during Robinson’s possession he recognized the edge of the swamp as the line, and made no claim to any of the swamp land, and that Kennedy remained in possession thereof.

On May 12, 1885, Robinson conveyed a part of the tract that had been so conveyed to him to S. P. Brockington, describing the part conveyed as follows:

“All that certain tract, etc., containing 240 acres, more or less, bounded north by lands of grantor, east and south by .lands of J. E. Kennedy, and west by the middle of the run of Pudding Swamp, and having such marks, boundings, and buttings as represented by a plat of same made by J. E. McElveen, D. S., and dated May 12, 1885.”

Robinson’s son (the witness above mentioned) testified that he was present and was one of the chain carriers on the survey made by McElveen, cutting off the 240 acres conveyed by his father to Brockington, and that his father and Brockington were also present, and that in surveying the land the surveyor stopped at the edge of the swamp. The plat referred to in the deed shows the swamp and the contour line thereof, which is indicated by a dotted line, on which is written, “The edge of the swamp is the line,” and the north and south lines both stop at the edge of the swamp on the dotted line.

*93 In 1890, S. P. Brockington conveyed the same tract to W. M. Brockington, giving the western boundary as “the middle of the run of Pudding Swamp,” but he warranted the title only as against himself and those claiming under him.. In 1898, W. M. Brockington conveyed it to W. R. Barrow and others, giving the same western boundary, and adding, “The premises herein conveyfed being designated on plat of same made by J. E. McElveen, D. S., and dated May 12, 1885, and hereto appended.” His warranty excepts the swamp land. . All subsequent conveyances, including that to the plaintiffs, give the boundary on the west as “the middle of the run of Pudding Swamp,” and all of them, except those to plaintiffs, refer to the McElveen plat, which was on record.

The land in dispute is not cleared. The swamp in which it lies is from one-half to three-fourths of a mile wide. In wet weather it is covered with water, but in dry seasons the water runs off, leaving the swamp comparatively dry, so that one can go about in it. Some of the witnesses said that it has no main stream or channel in which its waters are confined at any time; but at times there are two or three streams which run into each other, and even these vary in their location from time to time, so that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to determine where the run of Pudding Swamp is or was at any time.

1, 2 Naturally, actual possession of such land is limited both in its continuity and manner, so that plaintiffs’ effort to prove possession in themselves and their predecessors in title was limited to proof of such acts of dominion as getting straw and litter along the edge of the swamp and getting shingles out of the timber therein. As one such act, one of the plaintiffs testified that the timber in the swamp had been sold to a lumber company by him, or one under whom he claimed. On cross-examination the Court allowed defendants’ attorneys to ask him if the purchaser had not refused to pay for the timber until the title *94 thereto was established. The exception to this ruling is clearly untenable. And so is the exception to the admission of the sheriff’s testimony that he had an execution against the estate of W. T. Kennedy for the taxes due on the land for the year 1914. J. H. Kennedy, a son of W. T. Kennedy, had already testified, without objection, that his father paid the taxes on the land during his lifetime, and after his death his heirs had turned the land over to his brother., E. M. Kennedy, #ho was then dead, and some of the tax receipts had been introduced. He had also testified, without objection, that a tax execution against his father’s estate was then in the hands of the sheriff. Besides, the testimony was competent in support of the defenses set up.

3-8 In this State small streams having a margin of swamp are frequently called swamps. For instance, Dean Swamp, Bull Swamp, etc., would ordinarily be understood to mean the streams bearing those names.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 714, 111 S.C. 87, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-wheeler-sc-1918.