Court Opinion

ID: 6678972
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:18:52.297652+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:47.230129
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Mr. Justice Gary.
This is an action on a covenant of warranty in a deed of conveyance executed by the defendant, Garrison P. Davis, on the 15th of July, 1891, by which one-half interest in what is known as the Dávis Mill tract was conveyed to the plaintiff.
*389The sixth paragraph of the complaint is as follows: “That the defendant has not warranted and defended the premises to the plaintiff, but, on the contrary, one Alfred D. Davis, lawfully claiming twenty acres of the aforesaid premises, as above conveyed to plaintiff, by an older and better title, afterwards in an action brought by him in the Court of Common Pleas held at Sumter, State aforesaid, in which said Alfred D. Davis was plaintiff and this plaintiff defendant, did, on April, 1893, recover judgment against plaintiff for his seizen and possession of the aforesaid twenty acres of land, which are located on the southwest part of the tract of land so conveyed by this defendant to plaintiff.” The burden of proof was on the plaintiff to sustain these allegations, which he undertook to do by introducing substantially the following testimony, the complaint and answer in the action between A. E. Davis and Eevander Elmore, which are as follows:
Complaint. — That at the times herein mentioned the plaintiff was, and still is, the lawful owner of all that tract of land, in said county and State, containing 212 acres, adjoining lands now or formerly of John N. Davis, H. M. Davis, J. Dee Dávis, Garrison P. Davis and others, and fully represented as lot No. 3 on a general plat made by J. D. Mcllwaine, D. S., July 31, 1889, and recorded in the office of the register of mesne conveyance for said county, in book C C C, at page 120, and that the plaintiff was in the actual, peaceable, and quiet possession of the same. That between the 1st day of February and the 25th day of March, 1892, the defendant wrongfully, unlawfully, and forcibly broke and entered upon said premises, tore down the notices posted thereon by the plaintiff prohibiting any one trespassing thereon, cut the timber growing on about twenty acres of the same, boxed the turpentine trees thereon, trod down the grass, and otherwise injured said premises-to the plaintiff’s damage $500. Wherefore, plaintiff demands judgment against the defendant for $500 damages and costs.
*390Answer. — The defendant above named, by this his amended answer to the complaint herein, says and alleges:
For a first defense: That he denies each and every allegation contained in the complaint.
For a second defense: That at the times mentioned in the complaint, the defendant was and now is the lawful owner of, and was and is in the actual, peaceable, and quiet possession of all that tract of land, in said county and State, known as the “Davis Mill Tract,” measuring and containing 300 acres, more or less, and that the said “Davis Mill Tract” of land embraces the parcel of land referred to in the second paragraph of the complaint, as containing about twenty acres.
For a third defense: That at the times mentioned in the complaint the defendant was and is now in the lawful possession of the parcel of land referred to in the second paragraph of the complaint, and has not committed any trespass thereon against the plaintiff. The verdict of the jury in that case was: “We find for the plaintiff the land in dispute, and damages to the amount of $150.” Also, the facts appearing in the following statement: Two plats filed in the said record were both certified by Hon. J. H. Hudson, presiding Judge, as the plats used on the trial of said action, viz: one plat made by J. D. Mcllwaine, D. S., dated July 31, 1889, recorded in R. M. C. office, January, 1890, showing a line with surveyor’s certificate endorsed on said plat that said line was agreed upon by the said Alfred D. Davis, owner of the John Davis home tract of 212 acres, and Garrison' P. Davis, owner of the mill tract, as the dividing line between the said two tracts of land, by which plat the sixteen or twenty acres in dispute was shown to be a part of the John Davis home tract of 212 acres and not a part of the mill tract — the surveyor’s certificate being as follows: “The line commencing at corner lot No. 2 and lot No. 3 at letter A, thence to C, and on to D, was made by consent of the parties interested as a covenant line. The deeds of the mill place mentioned high water mark as being the *391line; but the parties made this the line, and directed me to make it as represented on the plat.” Signed James D. Mcllwaine, D. S. But said Garrison P. Davis testified at that trial that he agreed upon said line only upon condition that it was the right line. The second plat made by H. D. Moise, D. S., February 18, 1893, under order of survey in said action, showing the land in dispute to contain sixteen acres, and not twenty, as alleged in the complaint, and showing the same to be a part of the mill tract, and not part of the 212 acres of the John Davis home tract. The plaintiff then introduced in evidence the deed of conveyance from Adeline E. Dennis to John Davis and Garrison P. Davis, executed on the 23d of September, 1876, the description of the land in which is as follows: All that lot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying .and being in the county and State aforesaid, known as the “Mill tract,” and purchased by me of Darling Davis on the 3d of December, 1855, measuring and containing 300 acres, more or less, with the following butts and boundaries, to wit: North by lands of Davina Davis and Joel Brown, east by lands formerly belonging to Darling Davis, south by lauds of John Davis, and west by lands of G. P. Davis. Also, deed of conveyance from Garrison P. Davis to Devander Elmore, executed on the 15th of July, 1891, in which the land conveyed is thus described: One undivided half interest in the following described tract of land, in the county of Sumter, in the State of South Carolina, to wit: 300 acres, more or less, being the tract sold or conyeyed to John Davis and Garrison P. Davis by Mrs. A. E. Dennis, by deed bearing date the 23d day of December, 1876, the present boundaries being about as follows: North by lands known as the Dunlap tract, east by land said to belong to W. D- Arthur and land of G. P. Davis, south by lands of Elias Davis, and west by Murray Davis, DaFayette Davis, and John McCaskill. The next testimony introduced was the following statement: Darling D. Davis et al. to Alfred DaFayette Davis, J. Dee Davis et al. This was a deed of partition amongst the heirs of John *392Davis, deceased, dated January, 1890, with the Mcllwaine plat attached. Deed and plat duly recorded in January, 1890. It recited that John Davis had died in 1878, owning the John Davis home tract -and a one-half undivided interest in the mill tract adjoining to the east, and the said Garrison P. Davis, the appellant here, owning the other one-half interest in the mill tract. By this partition deed, a parcel of 212 acres of the John Davis home tract, next adjoining the mill tract, to the west thereof, was allotted to Alfred LaFayette Davis, the plaintiff in the former action, and the undivided half interest in the mill tract belonging to the deceased was allotted to J. Dee Davis, another of the heirs. The Mcllwaine plat and survey, s^<,pra, was made for the purpose of said partition, and the dividing line between these two tracts of land, to wit: the John Davis home tract and the mill tract, being in doubt, all the parties to the partition deed and Garrison P. Davis, the appellant, met on that survey and fixed the Mcllwaine line as the true dividing line between the two tracts. By that survey the sixteen acres in dispute were within the 212 acres allotted to Alfred D. Davis, the plaintiff in the former action, and not within the boundaries of the mill tract. H. D. Moise, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that since the trial of the former action he found among the equity records in the case of Dennis v. Dennis an old plat of the mill tract, made in the year 1855, from which it appeared that the sixteen acres in dispute was then a part of the mill tract, and not a part of the John Davis home tract. The plat was accidentally found in the partition proceedings of the estate of John E. Dennis, and was not properly traceable to estate of said Dennis, as it does not appear from the deeds that he ever owned the mill tract,'but same belonged to his wife, Mrs.' A. E. Davis; that by the aid of said old plat he had made a survey, under order of Court, in the present action, and had located the sixteen acres as part of the mill tract, and that, in his opinion, the sixteen acres were embraced within the boundaries of the deed of the *393appellant, Garrison P. Davis, to the respondent, Devander Elmore. He also testified that he found the mill tract to contain 357 acres, instead of 300 acres mentioned in the deed. The defendant objected to this testimony. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant made a motion for a nonsuit, which was refused. Defendant then introduced testimony. The jury rendered a verdict for $255.59 in favor of the plaintiff.
1 The defendant has appealed upon numerous exceptions, which need not be considered seriatim, the practical issue being as to the force and effect of the judgment in the case of A. D. Davis against Devander Elmore. The question of title was not involved in the former action. Each of the parties in that action was willing that the other should have whatever land was included within the boundaries mentioned in his deed. No question was made that land had been conveyed to which the grantor had no title. While Garrison P. Davis was owner of the land which he afterwards conveyed to Devander Elmore, he and the heirs of John Davis, who then owned the land allotted to A. D. Davis in partition proceedings, agreed upon the boundary line. It appears from testimony introduced by the plaintiff that the plat was recorded in January, 1890 (prior to Devander Elmore’s purchase of the land), with the surveyor’s certificate endorsed thereon, which showed that the dividing line had been agreed upon by A. D. Davis, owner of lie John Davis home tract of 212 acres, and Garrison P. Di\vis, then owner of the mill tract, and that the sixteen or twenty acres in dispute was shown to be a part of the John Davis home tract of 212 acres, and not a part of the mill tract. Not only was said agreement as to the boundary line binding upon Garrison P. Davis, but also upon Devander Elmore, his grantee. In the case of Davis v. Elmore, 40 S. C., 533, Mr. Chief Justice Mclver, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said: “Surely there cannot be any doubt that where the dividing line between two coterminous proprietors is doubtful, and for the purpose of *394solving such doubt they meet together and establish an agreed line, such agreed line must be regarded in all future controversies to be the true line. And there can be as little doubt that if the defendants grantor, Garrison P. Davis, -was present at and acquiesced in the establishment of the agreed line in question, both he and his subsequent grantee, the defendant, would be bound thereby. This is precisely what the Circuit Judge charged the jury, leaving it to them to determine the question of fact whether Garrison P. Davis was present at and acquiesced in the establishment of such agreed line.” The judgment of the Circuit Court was affirmed, thus showing that Garrison P. Davis acquiesced in the establishment of the boundary line, and that his grantee, Levander Elmore, was bound thereby.
2 This construction of the judgment shows that there was an entire failure of testimony on the part of the plaintiff to sustain the allegations of his complaint as to the breach of the covenant of warranty, and the nonsuit should, therefore, have been granted. This is not a case where there was merely a failure of testimony on the part of the plaintiff to sustain the material allegations of the complaint, but the construction which the Court has placed upon the judgment strikes down the very foundation of plaintiff’s cause of action. Sampson v. Manufacturing Co., 5 S. C., 465. Therefore, it is a proper case for this Court to order that the motion for nonsuit be sustained, and the complaint dismissed, and such is the judgment of this Court.