Epperson v. Stansill
Epperson v. Stansill
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an action for partition of land between plaintiff and defendant as tenants in common, the complaint alleging the interest of plaintiff therein to be five-sixths interest in fee and of the defendant to be one-sixth interest in fee. The answer denied that plaintiff had any interest in the premises, alleged sole ownership in defendant, and plead the statute of limitations. The issue of title thus raised was submitted to a jury, Judge Aldrich presiding, and ’the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant. Whereupon plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was granted in the following order from which comes this appeal: “A motion for a new trial having been made in this case on the minutes of the 'Court on the ground that the Circuit Judge read the defendant’s fourth (4th) request to *487 charge to the jury, but did not charge the same, and thereby misled the jury by the intimation that he had adopted the same, whereas, he intended tó refuse to charge the same. After a full argument by the counsel, it is ordered: That said motion be and the same is hereby granted, and a new trial ordered.”
The request to charge referred to is as follows: “4. That if the jury believe that James Wallace Epperson and James M. Epperson were ancestor and heir, and that they or either of them held ten years’ consecutive possession of the land in dispute, claiming it as their own, then the plaintiff’s right of action is barred, and they must find for the defendant. Turpin v. Sudduth, 53 S. C., p. 295.” The facts are thus stated in the “case“The plaintiff introduced in evidence a deed of the land in dispute to James E. Epperson, signed by one John B. Johnston, executed in 1879. Plaintiff further proved that James M. Epperson was one of the children of James E. EpperSon. That James Wallace Epperson was the son of James M. Epperson. That James Wallace Epperson conveyed the land in dispute to the defendant, Stansill, in 1894. That James M. Epperson died in 1882 and James E. Epperson died in 1892. Plaintiff claimed and introduced evidence in support thereof, that lot was an open lot and that James E. Epperson had such possession as the nature of the case would permit, and also claimed and introduced evidence in support thereof that plaintiff and defendant claimed title from ‘a common source.’ Defendant claimed and introduced evidence in support thereof, that James L. Epperson never had any possession, but that James M. Epperson was in possession before and at the time of his death; that the guardian of James Wallace Epperson had possession from the death of James M., his father, until he came of age, and that James Wallace had possession up to the deed to Stansill and Stansill had possession ever since.”
*488
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Epperson v. Stansill.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. New Trial. — It is error of law to grant a new trial for misdirection of the jury if instruction be correct. 2. Real Property — Adverse Possession — Limitation of Actions.— When the heir is in of his ancestor’s possession of realty and makes no new entry, the possession of ancestor and heir may be united in making out the statutory period.