Court Opinion

ID: 6673445
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:14:06.364653+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:37.135908
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Wright, A. J.
The demurrer is not well taken, and the order of the Circuit Judge overruling it is without error. The cause of demurrer assigned by the appellants is that “the last will and testament of William Anderson is alleged in the first section of the complaint to have been executed and admitted to probate in the State of Arkansas, and does not appear ever to have been admitted to probate in this State, and the lands mentioned in the third and fourth sections of said complaints, which are the subject of actions are, as appears therefrom to be, situated beyond the limits “ of the State and out of the jurisdiction of the Court.” It may at once be admitted, as contended for on behalf of the appellants, that real estate is governed by the lex rei sitae, and that title to land can be acquired and lost only in the manner prescribed by the law of the place where land is situate. A more comprehensive expression of the rule cannot be found than that contained in the language of the Court in Lamar vs. Scott, 3 Strob., 564. This concession, however, does not remove the difficulty in the way of the appellants. There objection is that the respondents cannot claim any right derived through a devise of real estate in another State, unless probate of the will devising it has been obtained from our own Courts.
This, too, may be granted, and yet the demurrer may not be sustained. “ Probate is, however, operative merely as the authenticated evidence, and not at all as the foundation of the title to the property disposed of by the will. The title passes to the devisee or legatee at the death of the testator, and the probate of the will relates back to that time.” — 1 Jarm. on Wills, 215. The title to one-fourth of the property, under the will of William Anderson, vested in his brother, Lovinska Anderson, who, by his last will and testament, devised his whole estate therein to the plaintiffs, then minors. Their complaint is that the defendant, James P. Moseley, has disposed of their said interest, and invested the proceeds in real estate in this State, to the use and benefit of himself and co-defendants, and they aver that the real eslfete so devised is stamped with a trust which equity will execute in their favor and behalf. If the defendants, when they answer, deny the charge so alleged, the plaintiffs will be put to their proof, and the question now made may possibly arise, and will be determined by the Court according to the character and form in which it may be presented. To sustain the de*153murrer would be an assumption that probate of the will has not been made in South Carolina, which would be equivalent to holding that the plaintiffs are obliged to set out in their complaint every element of proof necessary to sustain it. This would not be in accord with any rule of pleading with which we are familiar. The motion is dismissed.
Moses, C. J., and Willard, A. J., concurred.