37 S.C. 102 | S.C. | 1892
The-opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an actiou to recover possession of a tract of land containing 200 acres, more or less, alleged to be in the possession of the defendants. In their answer, the defendants admit their possession of the land, but
It is stated in the “Case” that “The following papers were offered in evidence by the plaintiffs and allowed by the court:’ ’ 1st. Sheriff DuPre’s deed to the plaintiffs for the land in dispute. 2d. Deed from J. C. Williams to J. N. Carwile, dated 27th March, 1862, for a tract of land described by metes and bounds, containing 110 acres, more or less. 3d. A. deed from Nimrod Williams to J. C. Williams, dated 13th July, 1860, for the same land, containing a recital that it was land devised to •said grantor by the will of his father, A. Williams. 4th. Will of Arthur Williams, devising same tract to his son Nimrod, which wall was admitted to probate 21st May, 1860. 5th. Plat
At the close of the testimony for the plaintiffs, one of the counsel for defendants moved for a non-suit, upon the ground that no levy was proved under either execution; which motion being overruled, another one of the counsel for the defence moved for a non-suit, “on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence as to the possession of Branyan,” which was likewise overruled. No testimony being offered on the part of the defendants, after argument of counsel, and after certain requests to charge were submitted, which being sufficiently set forth in the exceptions need not be repeated here, the Circuit Judge charged the jury as set out in the “Case,” which charge, together with the exceptions served for the purpose of this appeal, should be incorporated in the report of this case.
The first, third, fourth, and fifth exceptions impute error to the Circuit Judge in refusing to allow the defendants to introduce evidence tending to show that the judgments under which the land in question was sold, and through which plaintiffs claim, were void for want of jurisdiction, and in holding that
The sixth exception imputes error to the Circuit Judge in receiving in evidence the deed from DuPre, sheriff, to the plain-
It only remain's for us to consider the sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first exceptions, all relating to the matter of the homestead. We do not propose to consider these exceptions seriatim, but simply to determine what we consider to be the law upon the subject, and to inquire whether the judge’s charge is in conformity to such law.
If, then, Branyan was entitled to a homestead in the land when these judgments were recovered, and if, as we have seen, the judgments were not a lien upon the homestead, and if, as has been frequently held, a judgment debtor can sell or mortgage his homestead, then it follows that the judgments never could be a lien upon so much of the land as is included in the homestead; for as soon as it is sold and conveyed to a third person, it becomes his property, and as such, of course, not subject to the lien of judgments against another person. See Cantrell v. Fowler, supra, at page 428. The result of this necessarily is, that if Branyan was entitled to a homestead in the land in question at the time the judgments were recovered, the plaintiff's could acquire no title by the sheriff’s sale under these judgments to so much of the land as would be included in
We think, also, that there was error in the instructions as to the damages. It seems to us that it was a mistake to treat the case as that of a tenancy in common. Tenants in common are seized per my and per tout, each being entitled, before severance, to an interest in every inch of the soil; while here, if the right of homestead was established, the relations of the parties were very different. In such a case, the plaintiffs alone were entitled to every inch of the soil, outside of the homestead, without any right on the part of the defendants to any participation therein, while, on the other hand, the plaintiffs had no interest whatever in a single particle of the soil within the homestead limits. It seems to us, therefore, that the amount of damages to which the plaintiffs were entitled depended upon--, the inquiry whether the defendants occupied and used land outside of the- homestead limits, and, if so, how much. Of course, we need not add, that if the jury believed that the right of homestead had not been established, the plaintiffs might, if they otherwise established their title, recover the-
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial, and with the instruction to that court to make provision as indicated for laying off the homestead, if the right to the same be allowed.