Brantley v. Bittle

51 S.E. 561 | S.C. | 1905

July 18, 1905. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for partition and to enjoin the enforcement of a judgment rendered against the testator, in 1867, and revived in 1900, against the administrator of his estate. The appeal raises the question as to the validity of the judgment, and involves the construction of the testator's will.

John Bittle made his will in 1868, and died prior to the 22d of February, 1871, as the will was admitted to probate on that day. The fifth clause of the will is as follows:"Fifth: I give and bequeath to my daughters, Roxana Bittle and Emily Vick (widow of Albert Vick, deceased,) the whole of the remainder of my estate, both real and personal, to have, hold and enjoy the same jointly during their natural lives, and upon the death of either of my said daughters (Roxana or Emily), it is my will and desire that portion of my estate to which she was entitled at her death shall go to the one then surviving (Roxana or Emily), and at the death of the other, it is my will and desire that the *181 whole of my estate, both real and personal, be equally divided among all my heirs, share and share alike, my grandson, Franklin Bittle, son of my daughter, Emily Vick, taking an equal share with the other of my heirs, the child or children of any deceased parent taking the share to which his, her or their parent would have been entitled, if living."

The testator left surviving him eight children, viz: Eliza J. Brantley, Elmira Long, Narcissa Buchanan, Emily Vick. Roxana Bittle, Mary Ulsey Liles, Irvin Bittle, and John W. Bittle, also three grand-children — children of his deceased son, Burrel Bittle. He likewise left surviving him his grand-son, Franklin Bittle — an illegitimate son of Emily Vick. Franklin Bittle and certain of the heirs conveyed their rights in the testator's estate to John W. Bittle. Eliza J. Brantley, one of the parties making said conveyances, died leaving children before the surviving life tenant. The surviving life tenant died on the 31st of May, 1900.

The first question that will be considered is whether the children of Eliza J. Brantley, who conveyed her share to John W. Bittle, have any interest in the estate under the will of the testator.

His Honor, the Circuit Judge, ruled upon this question as follows: "The referee held that under the clause of the will set out above, the children of the testator who were alive at the time of the death of the testator, and Franklin Bittle, who was specially provided for in the will the same as the children of the testator, and the children of Burrel Bittle, collectively representing their father, took a vested fee in remainder, and that `it, therefore, follows that if during currency of the life estates, any of these remaindermen conveyed away his or her interest in said estate, the purchaser of such interest took a good title thereto, and the children of such remaindermen have now no interest or title thereto.' It seems clear that the testator by the use of the word `heirs' meant heirs taking per stirpes, which in this case means the same as children, and immediately upon the death of testator, the title to the realty, which *182 is herein sought to be partitioned, vested in these children of testator, who were surviving at the time of his death, and in the children of Burrel Bittle (his deceased son), and in Franklin Bittle, jointly. They took a vested, transmissible interest in remainder, and were it not for the use of the words, `the child or children of a deceased parent taking the share to which his, her or their parent would have been entitled if living,' it might be construed to be a vested, transmissible indefeasible fee in remainder, but by the use of the words quoted above from the will, the testator provided for another class to take as executory devisees in case any of the first class, his children or `heirs,' as intended by the terms of the will, should die during the life estate, leaving children. If any of his children who were surviving at his death should die during the life estate leaving children, then the interest of such child of the testator which had been vested would be divested, and the children of such deceased child would take as executory devisees by substitution. And as the grantee of any such deceased child of the testator could not take any greater interest in the estate than his grantor had: as by the death of any child or `heir' of the testator during the life estate leaving child or children the fee would be divested and by substitution vested in such child or children as executory devisees; it necessarily follows that the title to an interest given by a child or `heir' of testator who died during the life estate leaving child or children would not constitute good title, but, on the contrary, the child or children of such child or `heir' of testator would take the title which had been in the parent. These views are fully sustained by the case of Brown v. McCall, 44 S.C. 504,22 S.E., 823, and the case of Rutledge v. Fishburne, 66 S.C. 155,44 S.E., 564."

The appellant contends, that the words, "the child or children of any deceased parent, taking the share to which his, her or their parent would have been entitled if living," have reference to the children of the testator dying during his lifetime, and not to the heirs dying after his death, and before *183 the falling in of the life estates; that those words were used for the purpose of showing that the division among his heirs was to be made per stirpes and not per capita. These words were not intended to show the proportions in which those answering the description of heirs, at the death of the testator should take, for in that case they would be inconsistent with the provision that the estate should be "equally divided" among such heirs, "share and share alike," and there is no necessity for resorting to such construction. Full force and effect can be given to both provisions by construing the said words in the last sentence of the foregoing clause, as intending that the child or children should take the share of the heir who died after the testator and before the falling in of the life estates.

Under our construction of the will, the Circuit Judge erred in ruling that the word "heirs" was used in the sense of "children." It was, therefore, necessary to resort to the statute of distribution for the purpose of ascertaining who were the testator's heirs. When there is a devise to a class, and it is necessary to resort to the statute of distribution, for the purpose of ascertaining who compose the class, it will also be necessary to consult the statute in order to determine the proportions in which the individuals take, unless the context of the will shows in what proportions the testator intended they should take. The words "equally divided" and "share and share alike," manifest the intention of the testator that those answering the description of "heirs" at his death should take per capita and not per stirpes. Allen v. Allen, 13 S.C. 512; Dukes v. Faulk, 37 S.C. 255,16 S.E., 122.

The decree of the Circuit Judge as to the question under consideration (except in the respects indicated) is satisfactory to this Court, for the reasons therein stated, and his conclusion is fully sustained by the authorities which he cites, to which may be added the case of Woodley v. Calhoun,69 S.C. 285. The exceptions raising this question *184 are overruled, as they do not assign error in the ruling that the heirs take per stirpes instead of per capita.

Roxana Bittle and Irvin Bittle died without leaving children, about the year 1873. Thereafter Eliza J. Brantley conveyed to John W. Bittle "all the right, title, interest, claim and demand, which she had of, in and to all the undivided estate of John Bittle, either in possession or expectancy." She died before the death of the last life tenant, leaving children. The question for consideration is whether the shares which Eliza J. Brantley took as one of the heirs of Roxana Bittle and Irvin Bittle passed by her conveyance to John W. Bittle, or descended to her children at the time of her death, under the provision of the will, that they should take by substitution in case the parent died before the falling in of the life estates. The language of the deed is comprehensive enough to show an intention on the part of Eliza J. Brantley to convey the said shares. There are no words in the will manifesting an intention to create cross-remainders between those to whom the property was devised. The shares which Eliza J. Brantley inherited from her brother and sister were not subject to the provisions of the will, and she had the right to dispose of them as she saw fit. The principles applicable in such cases are stated in Boykin v. Boykin, 21 S.C. 513; Dickson v. Dickson, 23 S.C. 216;McGee v. Hall, 26 S.C. 179, 1 S.E., 711, and Gordon v.Gordon, 32 S.C. 563, 11 S.E., 334. The exceptions raising this question are sustained.

The record contains the following statement of facts: "The judgment of C.J. Lilly against John Bittle, the testator, was obtained in 1867. Nothing appears to have been done to keep this judgment alive until the year 1900, when A.H. Buchanan was appointed administratorde bonis non, with the will annexed, and was served with summons to renew. It is presumed that the personal estate of John Bittle was fully administered by the executors. No effort was even made to renew this judgment against them or any of them. It does not appear when the *185 last one of them died. There is an assignment upon the original execution, dated May 3d 1873, of this judgment to J.W. Bittle, and it is still owned by him. Upon the service of summons upon Buchanan he made default, and thereupon an order to renew was taken. The heirs were not made parties to this proceeding, though it appears they endeavored to be heard thereon. The issue, which is raised in the complaint in this case, is that the judgment is presumed to be paid from lapse of time and is not now a lien on the lands of the estate. This issue is now before us." The referee decided the issue against the appellant, John W. Bittle. His Honor, the Circuit Judge, simply adopted the report of the referee in this respect, and made it the judgment of the Court.

The appellant's seventh and eighth exceptions are as follows:

"VII. The Circuit Judge erred in holding that the renewal of the judgment of Lilly v. Bittle against the administratorde bonis non of John Bittle, did not revive that judgment and its lien upon the land of John Bittle's estate.

"VIII. The Circuit Judge erred in holding that the revival of a judgment and renewal of the execution against the personal representative of the deceased, where such judgment was granted prior to 1868, although the proceedings to revive the same were commenced more than twenty years after the entry of the judgment, did not revive the lien of said judgment."

The appellant relies upon the cases of McNair v. Ingram,21 S.C. 70; Leitner v. Metz, 32 S.C. 383, 10 S.E., 108;Rowland v. Shockley, 43 S.C. 246, 21 S.E., 21, and Woodward v. Woodward, 39 S.C. 259, 17 S.E., 638. We do not deem it necessary to discuss said authorities at length, as neither they nor the recent cases of Gregory v. Perry, 71 S.C. 246, or Anderson v. Baughman, 69 S.C. 38, sustain the proposition that a judgment recovered against a debtor during his lifetime can be revived against the administrator of his estate when the summons for renewal was not issued *186 against the administrator within twenty years after the death of the judgment debtor, and when the right of action onthe judgment was barred at the time the summons wasissued.

In the case of Haselden v. Whitesides, 2 Strob., 353, Mr. Justice Withers, in behalf of the Court, uses this language: "It is not to be overlooked that the inclination of the Courts, in modern times at least, is not to look with favor uponlegal representatives, who by new promises prevent the bar of the statute, or who fail to plead it, in cases where it may be applied. In this tendency is to be seen a regard for distributes, legatees, and heirs, whose interests are directly involved. If my recollection be correct, it has been announced by the equity jurisdiction that the representative of an estate ought to plead the statute against a demand that is barred." The proceedings for renewal of a judgment are in the nature of an action — Adams v. Richardson, 32 S.C. 139 — and it is the duty of an administrator to plead payment, or any other defense which shows that the right of action on the judgment is barred.

The rule governing the presumption of payment is thus clearly stated in Shaw v. Barksdale, 25 S.C. 204, 214: "It seems to us that where a creditor of an intestate in good faith recovers judgment against the legal representative on a bond or other like obligation before the twenty years have run out, that is a demand for the payment of his debt in the most effectual way, against the only person upon whom such demand could legally be made, and the judgment is a judicial ascertainment of the fact that the debt is not then paid, and gives a new point from which the currency of the period necessary to presume payment commences, not only in favor of the legal representative, but also in favor of the heir or devisee of the decedent. This doctrine, however, cannot be applied where the action is not commenced until after the twenty years have run out, because in such case the presumption of payment has arisen before any demand in legal form was made by the creditor for the payment of his debt, *187 and before anything was done by any one authorized to represent the estate tending to rebut the presumption. Afterthe presumption has once arisen, no act of the creditor, orany one assuming to represent the estate of the debtor, canhave the effect of creating any new debt, or even revivingthe legal obligation of any pre-existing debt, which has oncelost such legal obligation by the presumption arising fromthe lapse of time" (italics ours). See, also, Wood on Lim. of Actions, sec. 190.

Furthermore, this case comes within the provisions of section 2449, of the Code of Laws, which is as follows: "No mortgage or deed having the effect of a mortgage, no judgment, decree or other lien on real estate, shall constitute a lien upon any real estate after the lapse of twenty years from the date of the creation of the same: Provided, That if the holder of any such lien or liens as aforesaid shall, at any time during the continuance of such lien, cause to be recorded upon the record of such mortgage, or deed having the effect of a mortgage, or shall file with the record of said judgment, decree or other lien, a note of some payment on account, or some written acknowledgment of the debt secured thereby, with the date of such payment or acknowledgment, such mortgage, deed having the effect of a mortgage, judgment, decree or other lien, shall be, and continue to be, a lien for twenty years from the date of the record of any such payment on account or acknowledgment:Provided, further, That nothing herein contained shall be construed to affect the duration of the liens of judgments as prescribed by section 309 of the Code of Procedure."

This statute was construed in the case of Henry v. Henry,42 S.C. 1. The facts of that case were as follows: In February, 1867, judgment was recovered, and in October, 1887, summons was served on the judgment debtor, requiring him to show cause why the original judgment should not be revived. The defendant in writing consented to the renewal, and made affidavit that the judgment was justly and bonafide due, and that no part thereof had been paid. In October, *188 1887, the judgment was renewed, and execution thereon lodged with the sheriff, and in November, 1887, under this execution and another in favor of a third party against the defendant, junior to that of the plaintiff, real property was levied upon and sold, and the proceeds held by the sheriff. One Wesley Hornsby and others held an execution, in the hands of the sheriff, next in order of priority to that claimed by the plaintiff, and they demanded that the proceeds of sale be applied to their execution, on the ground "that the renewal of plaintiff's execution was irregular and void; that the judgment was presumed to be paid by lapse of time; that more than twenty years having elapsed from the time of its original entry to the issuance of the summons to renew the same, it had lost its lien on the real estate of the debtor under the act of December 24th, 1879." The Circuit Court sustained the objections urged against the validity of the judgment, and the order of the Circuit Court was affirmed by the Supreme Court. The purposes for which the statute of 1879 was enacted are clearly stated by the Court in said case.

If the devisees in this case have the right to rely upon the objections that were interposed to the validity of the judgment in the case just mentioned, then, under the testimony, the Court is bound to hold that the judgment is presumed to have been paid; that it afforded no basis for revival, as the right of action thereon was barred; and consequently that it is no longer a lien on the lands now in their possession. The Court, in the case of Brock v. Kirkpatrick,60 S.C. 322, 346, 38 S.E. 779, recognizes the well settled principle that the devisees have the right to rely upon the defense that the right of action against the administrator is barred, and quotes with approval the following language from Cleveland v. Mills, 9 S.C. 436: "The only defense, therefore, that could avail the defendants would have been either to show that there was no such debt due by the testatrix, or that the action thereon against her executor was barred by the statute of limitations, which they might do, even *189 though the executor should omit to interpose such a defense (Bird v. Houze, Sp. Eq., 250); or to show such laches on the part of the plaintiff as would deprive him of the right to invoke the equity powers of the Court, as in Mobley v.Cureton, 2 S.C. 140; or to have relied upon their own possession for the statutory period, as in Miller v. Mitchell, Bail. Eq., 437."

The facts in the case under consideration clearly show that the judgment creditor was guilty of laches, and that this is a proper case for the Court to apply this salutary doctrine. Wagner v. Sanders, 62 S.C. 73, 39 S.E., 950. The exceptions raising this question are overruled.

The defendant, Mary U. Liles, served certain exceptions which are set out in the record, but as she failed to serve notice of intention to appeal, the exceptions are not properly before this Court for consideration.

It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be modified in the manner indicated, and that in all other respects it be affirmed.

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