48 S.C. 472 | S.C. | 1897
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The Commercial Bank, a corporation under the laws of this State, having obtained a judgment against its codefendant, Levi Metz, caused the sheriff, under writs of fieri facias, to sell as the property of the said Revi Metz, two tracts of land, one of which contained 1,210 acres, situate in Rexington County, in this State, and the other containing 226 acres, situate in Richland County, in this State, on salesday in November, A. D. 1895, and both of said tracts of land were purchased by the defendant, the Commercial Bank. On the 16th day of November, 1895, an action was commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Rexington County by the plaintiffs above named against the defendants above named, wherein it was alleged that of the 1,210 acres of land,situate in Rexington County, a tract containing 483 acres, and another tract containing 109 acres, and also the entire tract containing 226 acres, situate in Richland County, were not wholly owned by the said Revi Metz, but that, on the contrary, the said Revi Metz only owned a one-sixth part thereof, because it was alleged that said three parcels of land were owned in fee simple by Elizabeth Metz in her lifetime, and that when she died intestate in-the year 1867, said lands descended to her children, and certain grand-children, as tenants in common, and that said lands remained for partition between such children and grand-children, as owning five-sixths thereof, and the defendant, Commercial Bank, as owning the remaining sixth, which had belonged to Revi Metz. The defendant, Sidlie Gibson, was made a defendant, because it was alleged that she held a mortgage on the Rexington lands, executed by Revi Metz. None of the defendants made answer except the Commercial Bank, and by its answer it denied that Sallie Gibson held any mortgage on the said lands, and also
The cause came on for trial at the February, 1896, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Lexington County, before his Honor, Judge Ernest Gary, who ordered these issues to be tried before a jury: “1. Was Elizabeth Metz seized of any estate in the lands in question at the time of her death, or in any of them? 2. If so, what estate did she hold? 8. Has the defendant, Levi Metz, acquired title to the lands in question, or any part of them, by purchase, except his distributive share, since the death of Mrs. Elizabeth Metz? 4. Has 'the possession of Levi Metz to the lands in question, or any of them, been adverse to the plaintiffs, or any of them? If so, for what length of time has such adverse possession continued?” Testimony was submitted by both sides, and, on objection, certain testimony was ruled inadmissible. Certain requests to charge were submitted by defendants — one of which was refused. After the Judge’s charge to the jury, a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff on all the issues. The defendant bank moved for a new trial, which was refused. The Circuit Judge then heard the case on the equity side of the Court, rendering a decree in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant bank now appeals, presenting twenty-three exceptions. Let the order denying motion for a new trial, the decree of the Circuit Judge, and the exceptions, be reported.
We will consider these exceptions in this order. So much of the Circuit decree as affects the tract of land lying in Richland County, in this State, is not appealed from, and,
To bring this issue up squarely, in regard to the testimony of this witness, E. T. Rauch, we quote from the “Case.” Mr. Lyles, as defendant’s attorney, asked: “How about his building a house — in what year was the house built?” Ans. “The latter part of 1877 or the first of 1878.
Now let us examine the fifteenth exception. His Honor, the Circuit Judge, in his charge to the jury, used this language: “To exclude one cotenant is not sufficient, (he) must exclude the whole before your title can ripen into adverse title.” Title to lands are derived in two ways — by purchase or by descent. In the case at bar, the plaintiffs claim title by descent. If one has a valid title to land, it makes no difference, in the eye of the law, by which method— purchase or descent — he attains such title. We mean that one source is esteemed as good as the other. A title to land by descent, as amongst the tenants in common, entitles each one of said tenants in common to go upon the whole of said laud, for, until a partition thereof, each tenant is seized thereof per my et per tout. But if any one of such tenants in common occupies the entire tract of land,for the period of twenty years, adversely, continuously, and openly to the other tenants in common, the law will presume, at the end of twenty years, that he has acquired title from the State and every other person in interest; and such ownership will be referred to the beginning of such possession. Not so, however, in the case of adverse possession of ten years, under the statutes of limitation. Whenever a man, in possession of lands for ten years, is sued for the possession of such land by the true owner, he pleads in bar of the true owner’s right that he has been in the open, notorious, adverse, and continuous possession of such land for
As to the other exceptions to the charge of the Circuit Judge, it may, possibly, be better not to discuss them; there must be a new trial here, and this charge of the presiding Judge will not be before the next jury. Besides, the cases we have cited are, at least two of them, recent, and, no doubt, will furnish a guide without our undertaking to say any more at this time.
Fourth. It is useless to discuss the alleged errors of the Circuit Judge in overruling the motion for a new trial. We have held, hereinbefore, that the Circuit Judge was in error as to his refusal to admit certain testimony offered by the defendant bank, and as these matters were presented as a basis of the motion for a new trial, of course the overruling of this motion was error.
Fifth. As to the alleged errors in the decree, we need not discuss them for the same reasons advanced under the fourth division.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the