91 S.E. 293 | S.C. | 1917
February 10, 1917. The opinion of the Court was delivered by In 1859, Evander Byrd, Jr., married a daughter of Griffin O'Nails. Mr. Byrd and his wife lived for a time with Mr. O'Nails. In 1860, Mr. O'Nails bought a tract of land near him and sold a part to his son-in-law, Byrd. Byrd moved on the land, built houses, cleared it up, and planted it to the time of his death in 1914. Before he died, Mr. *348 Byrd made his will disposing of the land, but only two witnesses signed as witnesses and the will failed. The heirs of Mr. Byrd brought suit for partition and one tract was ordered to be sold. When the title was examined, it was found that the deed did not convey a fee. This action was then brought by the heirs of Mr. Byrd against the heirs of Griffin O'Nails to reform the deed to conform to the intention of the parties. The trouble in the deed is in the habendum. The word "heirs" is not used. The warranty is to the grantee and his heirs, and against the grantor, his heirs and assigns, and all other persons lawfully claiming and to claim the same or any part thereof. The case was referred to a special referee, who found both law and facts in favor of the plaintiffs. From this finding the defendants appealed. The appeal was heard in the Court of Common Pleas, and the findings of the master were reversed and the complaint dismissed. From this judgment the plaintiffs have brought this appeal.
There are fourteen exceptions, but only two questions, to wit: (1) Is there sufficient proof of mutual mistake? (2) Are the plaintiffs barred by laches?
1. There is abundant proof of mutual mistake. The habendum is inartificial and complicated with extraneous matter. It reads as follows:
"To have and to hold all and singular the premises before mentioned, except the reservations of wood, lightwood, timber and right of way to Mrs. Lovedy Griggs for life contained and set forth in the will of John H. Griggs aforesaid, and subject also to any and all claims and no more which may have been upon the same in the hands of said John H. Griggs, all the right which he had therein with the exception above in his will."
Mr. O'Nails had recently bought from the Griggs estate a larger tract of which the land hereby conveyed was a part.
It seems to this Court clear, from the habendum itself, that O'Nails intended to convey to Byrd just exactly the *349 estate he (O'Nails) had just bought from the estate of Griggs, to wit, a fee. When that is followed by "I do hereby warrant and forever defend unto the said Evander Byrd, Junior, his heirs and assigns, against myself and my heirs, and against all persons lawfully claiming the same and any part thereof," the conclusion is irresistible that it appears on the face of the deed that the grantor intended to convey to the grantee the entire estate in the land conveyed, subject only to the incumbrances that were on the land when the grantor bought it. The word "heirs" being omitted in the habendum, it is evident that the deed did not grant a fee; but the intention to grant a fee is clear on the face of the deed itself. When the surrounding circumstances are taken into consideration, the conclusion is strengthened.
Mr. Byrd was a man of thrift, and, though uneducated, was a good man of considerable force. One of the defendants said of him:
"He was as smart a man as that country ever had. He was well thought of, and a man that I liked. Him and me served four years in the army, and he was as good a man as ever lived."
It is hard to believe that a man, of whom one opposed in interest would speak like that, would have been content to spend his whole life and his extraordinary energy and ability upon property which he expected to consume only upon himself, and leave his wife and child or children to come with no provision for their support. Nor is it probable that the grantor should have been so unmindful of the interest of his daughter, the wife of the grantee, as to permit this condition which would inure to his own benefit and the undoing of his daughter and her children. If only a life estate was intended, it is difficult to understand how it is that no suspicion of the true condition was known in the family of the grantor. They never suspected any rights in this land until they were informed by the plaintiffs, after their father's death. Neither the grantor nor the grantee *350 could read, and the deed was drawn by one not skilled in conveyancing.
There is evidence that impresses this Court that the grantor had a previous agreement with the grantee to sell him a part of the Griggs land, if he should buy it. This previous agreement is considered improbable by the Circuit Judge, for two reasons: (1) Because the witness is old; and (2) because it is not probable that there should have been an agreement to buy just 191 acres. The witness is old, but at the time of the transaction she was young and the wife of the grantee. It was a transaction which affected her future home. One of the well known signs of advancing age is that we forget the things of yesterday and remember with clearness the things of half a century ago. There are some little inaccuracies in her testimony that may have been slips of the tongue, but on the whole she is clear in her statements, remarkably so, as to recent events. There can be little doubt that Mrs. Byrd remembers those transactions. There is happily nothing to impeach her integrity. It is no more wonderful that the grantor should have agreed to buy 191 acres before the sale than afterwards.
It is said that the case of Jones v. Kelly,
"Him to have and to hold from this day forward the above-named land against myself, and I, Charles McAllister, of the aforesaid county and State, do further bind myself to warrant and defend against my heirs, executors and administrators, and all other persons lawfully claiming the same or any part thereof."
In that case there was no hint as to the estate conveyed, nor a warranty to heirs.
There are many other things that might be said, but these are conclusive. *351
2. This suit is not barred by laches. In Brock v. Kirkpatrick,
The grantor and grantee made their marks. They were unlearned. There is not the slightest evidence that the defect was discovered until after the sale for partition, and this suit was brought "with all convenient speed."
The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded to the Court of Common Pleas for Darlington county for such administrative order as will secure to plaintiffs a proper deed to their land.