In Re Percival's Estate

July 24, 1917. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This cause has been here once already, on the issue whether the Circuit Court had the right to order an exhumation of a dead body at the instance of the alleged mother, for purpose of identification. 101 S.C. 198, 85 S.E. 247. The instant trial in the Circuit Court followed hard on that exhumation, and it involves the heirship of two classes of persons to the woman named Belle Percival, and who claim the estate she left at her death. The estate was first brought into controversy by the Board of Commissioners of the Sinking Fund of the State, which commenced proceedings to escheat the estate, upon the idea that the woman left no heirs at law. Thereupon persons promptly appeared and claimed to be heirs at law. One class of claimants lives in Canada, and one of that class, Bridget Purcell by name, declares he is the mother of Belle. The other class of claimants is in the person of one man, Patrick Purcell, who declares he is a collateral kinsman. The jury found, after a long trial, that Bridget and those in the class with her are the heirs of Belle; and that Patrick was not an heir.

The four issues made by the appeal are all questions of procedure; they do not touch the merits of the controversy. The single issue made by the Sinking Fund Commission arises out of the order made by Judge Edward McIver.

The order was plainly right; it followed the law as declared in the Malone case, 21 S.C. 435; and Judge Bowman in proceeding to try the issue made by the traverse likewise followed the Malone case. All that has been adjudicated so far is that Bridget and those in the class with her are heirs, and that Patrick is not an heir. Any other claimant, not a party, is plainly not barred by what has been done. *Page 44

Patrick makes three issues to be decided. The first relates to the impaneling of the jury, the second relates to the exclusion of testimony, and the third relates to the admissibility of testimony taken de bene esse. Section 4042 of the Code of Laws regulates the procedure in impaneling juries. The Court allowed the Sinking Fund Commission to strike four names, and allowed each of the two classes of claimants to strike two names. The order of Judge McIver, before adverted to, directed the cases to be consolidated and "tried as one case." It was a contest, therefore, betwixt the claimants on one side and the Sinking Fund Commission on the other side, and each side was entitled under the statute to have four challenges, and each side got that. The first issue, therefore, which Patrick makes, must go against him.

The second of Patrick's issues is also unsound. Without deciding whether the declaration of Patrick, Sr., was competent, the claimant, Patrick, Jr., got the benefit of the fact the declaration was offered to prove. The claimant, Patrick, Jr., had offered testimony about a certain Anna Louise Purcell who had lived in Toronto, and who the claimant desired to identify with the deceased Belle. Patrick, Jr., the claimant, was the witness. He was asked by his counsel: "Q. Do you know whether she (Anna Louise) was ever in Charleston, S.C.? A. I do. Q. How do you know it? A. My father told me and wrote meabout it." (The italics are supplied.)

The Court ruled the answer incompetent because hearsay. But thereafter the Court admitted, without objection, a letter from Patrick, Sr., to Patrick, Jr., which contained the following sentence: "John sent me $10.00 from Waco, Tex., Hanna $5.00 from Chicago and brother Tom's girl, Anna L., sent me her usual generous present all the way from Charleston, S.C."

Patrick, Sr., never declared that the Anna Louise he knew about in Charleston was the same Belle Purcell or Percival *Page 45 who died there; he only declared out of the mouth of Patrick, Jr., and by his letter, that a woman named Anna Louise was once in Charleston. While the declaration to Patrick, Jr., was ruled incompetent, the declaration in the letter, which was the same thing, was admitted in evidence. The appellant has suffered no harm.

The third and last issue relates to the use of testimony debene esse in a trial of the instant sort. The contention of the claimant, Patrick, Jr., is that the Code of Procedure has made a difference betwixt civil actions and special proceedings, and that the instant case is a special proceeding. Sections 1 to 6 of the Code. And further and more particularly that section 3985 of the Code of Laws only permits testimony de bene esse to be taken in "civil actions" as technically and accurately defined by the Code of Procedure. We think the appellant has made a too literal and singular construction of section 3985 of the Code of Laws. The lawmakers had in mind civil action and criminal action, as defined by sections 4, 5 and 6 of the Code of Procedure; and the intent of the lawmakers was to limit the taking of the depositions de bene esse to civil actions in differentiation from criminal actions. The expressive word in the act is "civil" and not "action."

It is true the Code of Procedure accurately defines an action (section 2), the form of it (section 114), and the manner of commencing it (section 177). And it is true that the instant cause does not fall within those definitions. But when the legislature enacted the statute of 1883, that embodied in section 3985 of the Code of Laws, it was not amending the Code of Procedure; it was not, therefore, legislating about actions; it was legislating about the taking of testimony. The act expressly declares, in the recital part, that:

"In addition to the methods for taking testimony nowprovided by law, the testimony of any witness may be taken in any civil action depending in the Court of Common Pleas *Page 46 * * * by deposition de bene esse, where the witness lives without the county in which such cause is to be tried," etc. (Italics are supplied.)

The other method referred to by the statute, and to which the instant act was but additional, is the statute which permits the examination of witnesses by commission. Section 3972, et seq., Code of Laws. That statute provides for the examination of witnesses in a "suit pending," "civil cause," "matter or thing depending," and thing "depending." There is no question, therefore, that, had the testimony in the instant case been taken "by commission," It would have been taken within the words of that statute, and would have been admissible. The bar found the method "by commission" to be cumbersome; and the statute of 1883 (Act Dec. 22, 1883 [18 St. at Large, p. 373]), was enacted to add another method of taking testimony and by implication, in "suits," "civil causes," and in "matters and things depending" in the Courts of Common Pleas. It is manifest the legislature joined the two statutes together by the words before quoted and appearing in the recital to the act. The purpose, then, of the act of 1883 was, not to limit the taking of testimony to a particular character of lawsuit, but to enlarge the method of taking testimony, wherever such taking was permissible. Other words in the act of 1883 point to the legislative intent. One of them are "such cause;" the language is not such "civil action." Another expression is "Court of Common Pleas." Had the legislature been using words in a strictly technical sense, there would have been no need to add these words, for civil action implies one depending in the Court of Common Pleas. The thing in mind was the allowance of a new method of taking testimony in all cases in the Court of Common Pleas, and not the limitation of such method to strictly civil actions.

We are of the opinion that there was no error in the Circuit Court in the trial of the traverse, and the order of the Court affirming the verdict is affirmed. *Page 47