24 S.C. 452 | S.C. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs bring this action to recover possession of a certain lot of land in the city of Green-ville, now in the possession of the defendant, the plaintiffs claiming title under the will of Henry A. Cauble. The entire will is not set out in the “Case,” but only the eighth and ninth clauses thereof, which read as follows :
“Item VIII. I will and devise all the rest and residue of my real estate, wherever situated, unto my friend, Col. Robert E. Bowen, and my beloved wife, Jane E. Cauble, in trust for the sole and separate use of my four children, Bettie A. Gibson, Mattie L. Gilreath, James Oliver Cauble, and William H. Cauble, for and during the term of their natural lives, and after their death to such child or children as they may have living at the time of their death, their heirs and assigns forever.
“Item IX. I will and devise that my executor and executrix herein named, as soon after my death as they may think best, do have the said real estate mentioned and devised in item VIII. of this my will, divided into four equal shares, delivering possession of one share to each of my said children, except the storehouses and lots on the corner of Main and Coffee streets and now known as the Cauble block, the same being brick stores and running as far up Coffee street as Laurens, -which storehouses and lots I desire to be kept together and not divided; the rents and profits therefrom, however, to be equally divided between my said four children. I also desire that my tanyard be run by my executor and executrix herein named until all the bark on hand at my death may be used up.”
It seems that the persons appointed trustees as above were the same persons as those named as executor and executrix in the will, and that soon after the death of the testator they had the real estate appraised and divided as directed by the will, and that certain portions thereof designated in the “Case” were assigned to Mrs. Mattie L. Gilreath as her share, which includes the lot in controversy in this case, and that she gave to the plaintiffs a receipt as follows: “Received, Greenville, S. 0., January 2, 1883, of R. E. Bowen, executor, and Jane E. Cauble, executrix,
At the close of the testimony the Circuit Judge granted a non-suit upon the ground, as seems to be assumed in the argument here, both on the part of the appellants and respondent, that the trustees having executed their trust they could not maintain the action, the legal title having passed to Mrs. Gilreath by virtue of the statute of uses. The only question, therefore, raised by this ipeal is whether there -was error in granting the non-suit upon iat ground.
jThere is no doubt that the statute will not execute the use asng as there is anything remaining for the trustee to do, which hders it necessary that he should retain the legal title in order jly to perform the duties imposed upon him by the trust. ristow v. McCall, 16 S. C., 545, and the cases therein cited. I that the practical inquiry-in this case is, whether there was y duty remaining for the trustees to perform in order fully to rry into effect the objects of the trust. The first object of the ist was to hold the property, the legal title to which was directly jvised to the trustees for the sole and separate use of the four ildren of the testator, two of whom appear to be married jmen, for and during the term of their natural lives and after eir death to such child or children as they may have living at b time of their death; the next was to divide all the real estate 'vised to them except the brick stores known as the Cauble pck into four equal shares, delivering possession of one share to ¡eh of said children, and the next to divide the rents and profits ■ | the Cauble block equally amongst the four children.
Whether it was necessary for the legal title to remain in the justees in order to effect the first object of the trust since the iange in the law with respect to the separate property of a mar- • led Av'oman, and whether the remainders to the children were 1 Isted of contingent, and if the latter whether it was necessary , Jr the legal title to remain in the trustees to preserve such remainders, since the passage of the act of December 22, 1883
The fact that Mrs. Gilreath has, by her receipt above mentioned, acknowledged that she has received possession of the lot in question, amounts to nothing; for it is well settled that a receipt is always open to explanation, and it is conceded in this case that she never did in fact receive possession of said lot, because the defendant is now and was at the time of the division in possession and refused to surrender the same. Indeed, until the title to the lot here in controversy is finally determined, it may well be doubted whether the trustees could properly make any division of the property. The terms of the trust require that the property shall be divided equally, and if it should turn out that the defendant in this action shall be able to establish a superior title„to the testator so far as this lot is concerned, then, the division which the trustees have attempted to make wmuld not be an equal division, and the terms of the trust would not have been performed.
It seems to us clear, therefore, that there was error in granting the non-suit upon the ground that the trust being fully executed the title and the right to possession passed to Mrs. Gilr'eath by virtue of the statute of uses, and therefore that the action could not be maintained by the trustees. On the contrary, we think
The judgment of this coui't is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial.