71 S.E. 972 | S.C. | 1911
July 26, 1911. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is the second appeal in this case. The first is reported in
In 1874, John Bankston Davis conveyed to the Spartanburg Asheville Railroad Company a right of way two hundred feet wide, measuring from the center of the railroad, through a tract of land owned by him at or near Campobello. The deed was not recorded until after the controversy herein arose. Davis died in 1888, leaving a will wherein he devised the whole tract, including the right of way, to his niece, the wife of I.W. Wingo. In 1896, Mrs. Wingo conveyed it to her husband. On December 27, 1900, Mr. Wingo conveyed a part of the tract to defendant. The deed to defendant describes the lot conveyed as containing five acres and a fraction, and extending to a line fifty feet from and parallel to the railroad. Sometime after defendant bought, he enclosed his lot with a fence, and thereby prevented the railroad company and its patrons from using that part of the right of way conveyed to him and inclosed within his fence.
This action was brought to enjoin the maintenance of the fence, as a continuing trespass. All the defenses originally set up by defendant have been abandoned, except two, to wit: estoppel in pais, and abandonment by plaintiff's predecessor in title of the easement in that part of the right of way enclosed.
The Court ruled that the defense of estoppel was equitable in its nature, and, therefore, presented only an equitable issue which should be decided by the Court and not by a jury; and that the defense of abandonment was analogous, and made no issue upon which the defendant had the right of trial by jury. The appeal questions this ruling. *393
It will not be necessary to notice the complaint in detail to determine whether, in form, it is an action for the recovery of the possession of real estate, as contended by appellant, or whether it is only an action in equity for injunction, as contended by respondent, and, therefore, one of equitable cognizance. It has been decided by this Court too often to require citation of the cases that a plaintiff cannot, by framing his complaint so that his action would, under the old procedure, be one cognizable only by a court of equity, select the forum in which the issue shall be tried and thereby defeat a defendant's constitutional right of trial by jury. The complaint alone does not necessarily determine the character of the issues, — whether they are legal or equitable, — or the mode of trial to which the parties are entitled. Those are questions which must be determined from an examination of all the pleadings in the case. Now, in this case, the defendant claims title to the land in dispute, based upon the defenses mentioned. If they present issues which, before the adoption of the reformed procedure, were legal in their nature, — that is, issues which were cognizable by a court of law, then the defendant was entitled to have them decided by a jury.Addicks v. Lowry,
It is not surprising that some confusion has arisen from expressions which are frequently found in the textbooks and decided cases, characterizing estoppel in pais as equitable in its nature. It had its origin chiefly, if not wholly, in the courts of equity, and, at first, it was available only in that forum. Naturally, therefore, it has always been spoken of as equitable, and so it is, not only in its origin, but also in its nature. But, in various ways, many of the maxims and principles which originated in the courts of equity became engrafted upon the common law. Sometimes *394 it was done by statute, but not infrequently it was accomplished merely by the adoption of them by the common law courts, so that, in time, many of them were as available to litigants in those courts as to those in courts of equity. It was this tendency which finally resulted in the adoption of the reformed procedure and the amalgamation of the courts of law and equity. But an examination of the cases above cited shows that that great reform wrought no change in the inherent differences which previously existed between legal and equitable actions and defenses, or in the mode of trying them. Those which were legal, that is, cognizable by the courts of law, are still so, and those which were equitable still retain that character, and each must be tried by its appropriate tribunal.
As far back in the history of the administration of the law in this State as 1792, we find the doctrine of estoppelin pais administered by the law courts. In Lessee of Tarrant
v. Terry, 1 Bay 241, it was allowed to avail the defendant in an action of ejectment to try title to land. From that time to the present, our reports show that the principle has been administered by the law courts as a defense in actions to recover possession of land. Marines v. Goblet,
That an easement may be lost by abandonment is a principle too well established to admit of argument. Whether a party has abandoned his right to an easement is a question of fact and intention proper for the decision of a jury. Parkins v. Dunham, 3 Strob. 224; Lorick v.Ry.,
Reversed. *396