Austin v. Hunter
Austin v. Hunter
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiffs, as heirs at law of Sallie E. Austin, brought these three actions against the several defendants to recover possession of the tract of land described in the complaints. The three cases depend on the same facts and principles of law, and were tried together in the Circuit Court and in this Court. The defendants claim from Sallie E. Austin, who conveyed the land in dispute to J. Harrison Boyd, from whom they derive title by successive conveyances. In the answers it is admitted that the deed from Sallie E. Austin to J. Harrison Boyd contained no habendum clause, and that the word “heirs” was omitted from the granting clause and used only in the warranty. Conceding that at law such a deed conveyed only a life estate, the defendants set up as an affirmative equitable defense that full and adequate consideration for a fee simple title was paid to Sallie E. Austin by J. Harrison *474 Boyd, and “that in the drafting of said deed a mistake was made, in that the habendum was omitted from the said deed, so that the same contained no limitation to the heirs of J. Harrison Boyd.”
On this allegation the defendants asked that the deed be so reformed that it shall operate as a conveyance in fee.
The cause went to trial before a jury without any formal separation of the legal and equitable issues. At the close of the testimony the Circuit Judge refused to instruct the jury to find for plaintiffs, and on the contrary directed a verdict for the defendants. Thereafter a decree was filed sustaining the equitable defense and ordering reformation of the deed of Sallie E. Austin, as asked for by defendants.
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Under -such clear and uncontradicted proof of mistake a decree for reformation was inevitable. Johnson v. Gilbert, 13 Rich., 42; Brock v. O’Dell, 44 S. C., 22, 21 S. E., 976; Hutchison v. Fuller, 67 S. C., 280; 45 S. E., 164.
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Austin v. Hunter. Austin v. Woods. Austin v. Todd.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Deeds — Limitation of Estates. — A deed without an habendmm clause conveys to grantee only a life estate, and on his death the land reverts to grantor or his heirs. 3. Reformation of Deeds. — A decree for reformation of a deed by inserting an habendmm clause passing a fee simple is inevitable under uncontradicted proof that full value was paid for fee simple, that during the negotiations of sale nothing was said by the grantor indicating an intention to convey or purchase a life estate, that grantor indicated by her conduct and conversation an intention to convey the land without reservation or reversion and a warranty in the deed to the grantor and his heirs.