52 S.C. 193 | S.C. | 1898
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action was commenced on the 2d of June, 1896, for the purpose of recovering the amount due on a judgment which the plaintiff had obtained, in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County, against defendant’s intestate, on the 28th of September, 1871. The defense relied on was the statute of limitations and the presumption of payment arising from lapse of time. The plaintiff, after offering the record of the judgment in evidence, testified, without objection, that no part of the amount due on the judgment had ever been paid, unless it was paid to the sheriff, and then offered the deputy sheriff (the sheriff being sick at the time), who testified that, so far as he knew, and so far as the records of the sheriff’s office showed, no part of the amount due on the judgment had ever been paid. The plaintiff then offered the testimony of sundry persons residing in Kalamazoo, in the State of Michigan, to the effect that defendant’s intestate moved to that State in 1870 or 1871; that he married there “in the seventies;” that his wife died in 1892, and that soon thereafter he moved back to this State. One of those witnesses, Flora Anderson Weaver, when asked where Mr. and Mrs. Trowbridge lived after they were married, and until the death of Mrs. Trowbridge, replied: “Part of the time in Michigan and part of the time in South Carolina. .Their home was here” [Kalamazoo, Mich.], “but they spent some of their winters in the South.” That witness also testified that while W. C. Trowbridge was a citizen of the State of Michigan, he was a registered voter therein for both State and municipal elections, having registered first on 5th of November, 1870, and again on the 22d of October, 1882 — it being admitted on the trial that all qualified voters in Michigan were required to register every ten years. Charles H. Gleason, the city clerk of Kalama
At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, counsel for defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was granted, because the Court was “of opinion that plaintiff has not introduced evidence of the character required by section 311 of the Code, and the decided cases, sufficient to rebut the presumption of payment'of the judgment sued on arising from lapse of time.” From this judgment plaintiff appeals, on the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be set out here, as the only real question in the case is, whether the plaintiff had introduced any evidence tending to rebut the presumption of payment arising from lapse of time.
In the oral argument before this Court, counsel for respondent referred to the case of Garrett v. Weinberg, 48 S. C., 28, but we are unable to see what application that case has to this. There, it was held, and very properly held, that, under the well settled rule of property, the minority of one of several tenants in common, would protect the rights of the' adult tenants against the plea of the statute of limitations resting upon adverse possession, but would not protect the rights of the adult tenants in common against the presumption of a deed from lapse of time; and Mr. Justice Gary, in delivering the opinion of the Court, refers to the case of Hill v. Sanders, 4 Rich., 521, as showing why the rule does not apply to the presumption of a deed. The reason of the rule is based upon and grows out of one of the peculiar incidents of an estate of tenancy in common, by which tenant is.seized per my et pour tout; and, therefore, if adverse possession cannot be pleaded against any one of the tenants in common by reason of his minority, it cannot be pleaded against any of the others; for, if there can be no adverse possession against one, there can be none against any of the tenants in common. See Thompson v. Gaillard, 3 Rich., at pp. 422 and 423. But this manifestly does not apply to the presumption of a deed; and hence the distinction so properly recognized by Mr. Justice Gary, in. Garrett v. Weinberg. We are unable, therefore, to see what application that case has to this.
Counsel for respondent also relies upon the provision of the act of 1879, now incorporated in the Rev. Stat. as sec. 1961, as construed in Henry v. Henry, 31 S. C., 1; but that provision has no application to this case, for two reasons: 1st. Because it related solely to the lien of judgment and mortgages, and there is no question here as to the lien of the judgment — in fact, so far as appears, it never had any lien; for, under the law as it stood at the time this judgment was obtained — in 1871 — judgments were not liens,
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be, and the same is hereby, reversed, and that the case be remanded to that Court for a new trial.