42 S.C. 528 | S.C. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This appeal presents some additional phases in a controversy that has been conducted in our courts since the year 1884. Its history may be traced in 29 S. C., 278, 32 Id., 194, and 38 Id., 138, and having been so fully ventilated already, will require but little further statement. Some reference to the facts ought, however, to be made, to make the present issue intelligible.
A tract of land lying in Fairfield County, in this State, was conveyed to a trustee in'1867. In 1877, that trustee, in flagrant violation of his trust, conveyed the land to one Flenniken, who was fully cognizant of that. fact. Flenniken sold the land to an unlettered colored man, taking his bond and mortgage to secure the purchase money. This bond and mortgage were assigned to Giles J. Patterson for value. After the assignment thereof to said Patterson, the colored man reconveyed the land to Flenniken. Action was brought by the cestui que trust named in the trust deed against Flenniken to uproot the conveyance to him of the trust lands in 1884, and a notice of Us pendens was then filed. In 1885, said Flenniken conveyed his entire estate to James A. Brice, as assignee, for the benefit of his creditors. Giles J. Patterson brought an action against James A. Brice, as assignee, and to foreclose his mortgage, and refused to make Cassandra H. Rabb a party to his suit; and this action of Patterson ripened into a judgment in June, 1887, including therein a requirement that James A. Brice, as assignee, pay to said Patterson $201, which Brice, as assignee, had realized from rents of the trust lands. Patterson purchased the lands under his judgment, and went into possession thereof in 1888. The Supreme Court filed its judgment in favor of Rabb and against Flenniken in 1890. In order to retain his possession of the land as the owner thereof, Patterson began his action in 1890, which terminated adversely to all his claims in 1893.
However, in 1891, Mrs. Rabb and her new trustee began her action against Patterson to collect the $201, which had been collected by him from Brice for the rents in 1886 and 1887, and also to have him pay the five years’ rent which had accrued while he was in possession, and this is the action we are now
It seems to us that the Circuit Judge erred in holding that the appellant’s testator went into possession of the land in question as a bald trespasser; on the contrary, we think he took possession under a bona fide claim of right as authorized by a judgment of the court. The fact that the court has eventually held that the claim of the testator was unfounded, cannot affect the character of his possession. There is no doubt of the fact that Mr. Patterson went into possession as the purchaser at a sale made under a judgment of foreclosure obtained in an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage brought against a person who then held the legal title to the mortgaged premises; and there is little doubt that he then supposed, and had reason to suppose, that he had acquired a good title to the premises, for the proceedings show that two of the Circuit Judges and one of the Justices of this court were manifestly of that opinion. We think, therefore, that even if Mr. Patterson were now living, he could only be required to account for the rents and profits actually received by him, and not for the “rental value” of the premises. As was said by Johnson, Ch., in his Circuit decree in Johnson v. Lewis, 2 Strob. Eq., on page 160, approved afterwards by the Court of Appeals: “The rule is that if one comes tortiously into possession of an estate, he ought not to be spared, and ought to be charged to the extent of what it was capable of producing; but if he enter rightfully, and can show what the actual income was, that will determine his liability * * * The same principle ought, I think, to apply when the party in possession believes that the right of property was in himself, and has been thrown off his guard by the belief that he was not liable to account.” This view was fully sustained
It seems to us that the point of distinction lies in the fact that one who goes into possession of the land of another as a bald trespasser, or, as some of the cases express it, acquires the possession by force or fraud, he is entitled to no consideration at the hands of the court, and the strictest rule of accountability is, therefore, applied to him; but when one goes into possession under bona fide claim of right, though it may eventually prove to be unfounded, he is not to be punished for his honest mistake, but is only required to account for such rents and profits as he has actually received, and not for the “rental value” of the premises. To show that one who goes into possession under an honest, though mistaken, belief of right, is not to be treated as a trespasser when called upon to account for rents and profits, see what is said by Johnson, Ch., in his Circuit decree in Rainsford v. Rainsford, McMull. Eq., at page 336, and by Harper, Ch., in delivering the opinion of the Court of Appeals in Ridelhoover v. Kinard, 1 Hill Ch., at page 381. The cases cited by counsel for respondent are not in conflict with this view; for in Boyce v. Boyce, 6 Rich. Eq., 302, the defendant, Starr, not only went into possession as a bald trespasser, but he also acquired possession by an open defiance of an order of injunction made in a case to which he had made himself a party by proving his claim. In Kirkpatrick v. Atkinson, 4 S. C., 126, the defendant, Atkinson, acquired possession by fraud, and in Maner v. Wilson, 16 S. C., 469, the defendants went into possession under a paper which, though in the form of an absolute deed, they knew was intended as a mortgage.
But even if Giles J. Patterson could be regarded as a trespasser in taking possession of this land (and we have just held that such was not the case), it is very clear that his executrix cannot be charged with anything more than the amount actually received, the amount that actually enured to the benefit of her testator’s estate. The foundation of plaintiffs’ claim, their cause of action, so to speak, was the alleged trespass of the testator, and under the maxim, actio personalis moritur cum persona, the plaintiffs’ cause of action against the testator would not
So far as section 243 is concerned, it may be remarked that it does provide for a bond to indemnify the opposite party from damages, and that this remedy may be had in the case to ascertain damages, “by a reference or otherwise;” but then this bond only operated from 12th July, 1890; and if it was permissible to announce that it covered rents and profits as well as other items of “damages,” what would become of the rents and profits for two and a half years before that date? and also what would become of the $201 received from James A. Brice as assignee in 1887? We think it better to say that the term damages may cover rents and profits in some cases, but it must be evident that to so hold in this action would be to require the plaintiffs to split up their claims for rent into several actions. Besides, it must be remembered that such “damages,” under the injunction bond, may not only be obtained under “reference” proceedings, but the same section of the Code provides that it may be done “otherwise” than under “reference.” To pursue the subject further is unnecessary— it is untenable.
It follows from our preceding observations that the Circuit Court decree must be modified by having that decree fix the liability of Mrs. Patterson, as executrix, for the sum of $502.18, as the rents for which she, as said executrix, must pay, in lieu of $800, less the amount paid for taxes as ascertained by the decree; and that she, as said executrix, must pay the sum of $185.63 on account of the amount received by Giles J. Patterson from James A. Brice, as assiguee, instead of $201; but that in all other respects the said decree shall be affirmed.
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be modified as herein indicated, and that in all other respects such judgment be affirmed.