Bank of Columbia v. Gadsden

33 S.E. 575, 56 S.C. 313, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 29, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 S.E. 575 (Bank of Columbia v. Gadsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Columbia v. Gadsden, 33 S.E. 575, 56 S.C. 313, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 148 (S.C. 1899).

Opinions

The opinion, of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This action was for foreclosure of a real estate mortgage, executed by defendant, Gadsden, to W. R. Doty & Co., March 12th, 1884, assigned by Doty & Co. to John C.'Gadsden, March 27th, 1896. Some time after maturitjr of the note which it secured, it was transferred by John C. Gadsden to the plaintiff bank, as collateral to secure a loan of money. Defendant set up as a spfecial defense: ‘‘I. That at the time of the assignment of the note and mortgage described in the complaint by John C. Gadsden to the plaintiff, the same was long past due, and the plaintiff took the same subject to all equities between the defendant and the said John C. Gadsden. 2. That at the time of the assignment of the note and mortgage to the plaintiff by the said John C. Gadsden, as aforesaid, he was indebted to the defendant for money paid by the defendant for him, at his request and for his benefit, in an amount exceeding the amount due on the note and mortgage set forth in the complaint, and the plaintiff can now have no claim ag’ainst this defendant on the said note and mortgage.” Under this defense, no question having been raised as to its definiteness, defendant established that as surety for John C. Gadsden on [315]*315a bond secured by a mortgage of real estate belonging to the defendant and John C. Gadsden, executed to D. R. Flenni-ken in May, 1884, which was afterwards assigned to John J. Hemphill, he (defendant) paid to Hemphill thereon $250, February 3d, 1886, which was duly credited on the bond. Afterwards Hemphill brought suit to foreclose his mortgage, and obtained a decree of foreclosure in October, 1896. The decree provided that the land of John C. Gadsden should first be sold, but in case the proceeds thereof be insufficient to pay the mortgage debt, then to sell the land of F. M. Gadsden. After the sale of the tract of John C. Gadsden, the deficiency was $161.55, which the defendant, F. M. Gadsden, paid February 20, 1897. These two payments as surety are interposed as an equitable set off or defense against recovery in this case by John C. Gadsden’s assignee. The Circuit Court held that neither claim could be set off, and the appeal now involves the correctness of the rulings of the Court in reference thereto.

1 1. We will notice first the question raised as to the payment of the $161.55, February 20th, 1897. ' The' assignment to plaintiff was shortly after March, 1896, and the action was commenced March 15th, 1897. In reference to this matter the ruling of the Circuit Court was as follows: “The defendant can plead any set off existing between him and John C. Gadsden any time before notice to defendant of the assignment (Code, sec. 133). It does not appear when defendant got notice of the assignment The defendant alone testified about that matter; he said he had no notice of the assignment until plaintiff ‘demanded payment.’ It does not appear when payment was demanded; suit was begun March 15th, 1897. If defendant did not know of the assignment on 20th February, 1897, he can set off the payment then made; whether he had not such notice, was a fact for him to prove.” The Court, therefore, held that this set off could not be allowed. We think this was error. In the first place, assuming that the burden of proof rested on defendant to show that his set off accrued [316]*316before notice of the assignment, he testified that he had no such notice until payment was demanded, and the only evidence of any demand for payment was the bringing of the suit, which was after the payment of the amount claimed. Without any other evidence to the contrary, this was evidence sufficient to show that the payment was made before the notice of the assignment.

2 But we think the burden of proof rested on the plaintiff, as an assignee of a past due chose in action, to show not only that the assignment, but that the notice thereof to the maker ór obligor, was prior to the accrual of the alleged set off against the assignor. This seems to have been the rule previous to the adoption of the civil code of procedure. Newman v. Crocker, 1 Bay, 247; Brown & Co. v. Rees, 2 Tr. Con. R., 498; Tibbets v. Weaver, 5 Strob., 144; Jervey v. Strauss, 11 Rich., 383. Sec. 133 of the Code provides: “In case of an assignment of a thing in action, the action of the assignee shall be without prejudice to any set off or other defense existing at the time of or before notice of the assignment, &c.” We do not construe this as casting upon a defendant alleging a set off the duty of establishing that. the set off accrued before notice of assignment. He makes a prima facie defense when he establishes a set off against the assignor accrued at the commencement of the action, which plaintiff may rebut by showing that the set off accrued after the notice of the assignment. In the case of Harvin v. Galluchat, 28 S. C., 217, this Court said: “It is laid down in all the authorities upon the subject of assignment of unnegotiable paper (Story, Pomeroy and in numerous cases), that in order to protect his rights under an assignment, the first duty of the assignee is to give notice to the debtor. A failure to do this is at the peril of losing the debt, either by a'subsequent assignment to another party, or new defenses arising between the assignor and the. debtor, or a payment by the debtor to the assignor.” This set off having accrued-against plaintiff’s assignor before notice of the [317]*317assignment, should have been allowed as an equitable defense to the extent of the payment, with interest from the time of payment. 2. The claim to set off the $250, on February 3d, 1886, was rejected’by the Circuit Court on the ground that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations, the action having been commenced by the plaintiff March 15 th, 1897. Appellant contends that plaintiff not having formally 3 pleaded the statute of limitations, could not avail itself of this defense against this set off. We do not think this point is well taken. Section 94 of the Civil Code does provide that “the objection that the action was not commenced within the time limited can only be taken by answer,” but this could apply to a plaintiff only when called upon to answer or reply to a strict counter-claim or set off asserted as a cross-action against the plaintiff. A counter-■cla-im “must be one existing in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff, between whom a several judgment might be had in the action.” Defendant did not have a cause of action against the plaintiff. While his plea was in the nature of a counter-claim or set off against the plaintiff, “standing in the shoes” of the assignor, and the sufficiency of such plea on question made should be stated by the rule which would g'overn if the defendant were actually suing the assignor on the set off as a causé of action; still, in this case, the plea of set off is purely defensive, going merely to defeat plaintiff’s recovery, and not authorizing any affirmative relief against the plaintiff, as in the case of a counter-claim or set off by wajr of cross-action. Hence, defendant’s plea of “set off” is really matter of defense by way of avoidance. By section 174, plaintiff, except on defendant’s motion, is not required to reply to new matter in the answer not constituting a counter-claim; and by section 189, new matter in the answer not relating to a counter-claim, “is to be deemed controverted by the adverse party as upon a direct denial or avoidance,

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.E. 575, 56 S.C. 313, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-columbia-v-gadsden-sc-1899.