Battey v. Knight

44 S.E. 589, 66 S.C. 107, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 20, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 589 (Battey v. Knight) 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
Battey v. Knight, 44 S.E. 589, 66 S.C. 107, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 81 (S.C. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

The questions here presented for consideration are those exceptions presented on the one hand by the plaintiff to the decree pronounced by his Honor, Judge Gage, and on the other hand by those of the defendant to the same decree. A brief statement of facts may not be amiss. It seems that in the year 1893, the defendants, B. E. Knight and A. L. Ballentine, for value gave a mortgage of certain personal property, to wit: an engine and boiler, to the Sullivan Hardware Company to secure their indebtedness to the same, which said indebtedness was all paid except the sum of $33 on the 5th day of December, 1898, at which date it (the chattel mortgage) was assigned to the defendants, William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine, upon the payment of the sum of $33.. That on the 27th of January, 1898, the defendants,- B. E. Knight and A. D. Ballentine,executed four notes, each for $121.46, unto the plaintiff, George M. Battey, and to secure said four notes executed their chattel mortgage to said George M. Battey on the articles of property already mortaged by them to the Sulli *110 van Hardware Company, along with other personal property not included in Sullivan Hardware Company’s mortgage. Both of said chattel mortgages were duly recorded in the office of the register of mesne conveyance for Laurens County, wherein all of the defendants resided. That the said B. E. Knight and A. L. Ballentine failed to pay in full their indebtedness to George M. Battey, and the condition of said chattel mortgage was broken. In Noverriber, 1899, W. R. Richey, ES(L as the attorney for said George M. Battey, wrote to said B. E. Knight and A. L. Ballentine that the claims of plaintiff, Battey, were in his hands for collection. On the 5th day of December, 1899, the said B. E. Knight came to the law office of W. R. Richey, Esq., and asked sixty days extension of time in which to pay Battey’s debt, and W. R. Richey, Esq., agreed to do so, if his client, Battey, would so authorize, which the latter did by letter. On the same 5th December, 1899, the defendant, B. E. Knight, went with his son and codefendant, William B. Knight, to the office of George S. McCravey, who was the sheriff of Laurens County, and at their request said McCraveyprepared a notice of the foreclosure of the Sullivan Hardware Company’s mortgage, of which William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine claimed to be assignees, on the 12th December, 1899, and copies of the notice of said foreclosure was posted at three public places in the upper part of Laurens County, but none of such notices were posted on the court house door at Laurens, S. C. ' On the 12th December, 1899, a sale of said personal property included in the Sullivan Hardware Company’s mortgage was made and purchásed at the price of $30 by the said William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine. The property so purchased was left under the gin house of B. E. Knight ever since the sale just as it was before the sale. William R. Richey^ Esq., as agent of the plaintiff, Battey, after the expiration of the sixty days immediately following the 5th December, 1899, to wit: in March, 1900, and after due advertisement of the property, tried to sell said engine and boiler, but to his surprise was forbidden *111 to make such sale by William R. Knight and John A. Ballentine, upon the ground that they had purchased the same engine and boiler at the price of $30 at their sale, as assignees of Sullivan Hardware Company’s mortgage, on the 12th December, 1899. An offer was made by the plaintiff to buy their debt under the Sullivan Hardware Company’s mortgage, which offer was refused. So the said George M. Battey brought his action on the. equity side of the Court of Common Pleas for Raurens County, in this State, against the defendants, B. E- Knight, A. H. Ballentine, William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine: 1st. To recover judgment on his debt against B. E. Knight and A. R. Ballentine on the four notes they had executed to the plaintiff on the 27th January, 1898. 2d. To foreclose the chattel mortgage given by those defendants to Battey to secure their four notes aforesaid. 3d. To set aside the sale of the engine and boiler on the 12th December, 1899, by the defendants, William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine, under the Sullivan Hardware Company’s chattel mortgage, on the grounds: •(a) that there was a fraudulent collusion between the four defendants to make the sale on the 12th December, 1899, in order to defeat plaintiff’s mortgage on said property; (b) that the Sullivan mortgage was not a valid debt in the hands of the two defendants, W. B. Knight and John A. Ballentine, because the $33 paid for them was money advanced by B. E. Knight and A. R. Ballentine to their two sons for that purchase, and the debt secured by said Sullivan Hardware Company’s mortgage was paid at the time of said sale; (c) that said boiler and engine was liable to be sold to pay Battey’s debt and costs; (d) that the defendants, William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine, be enjoined from selling, or disposing of, or in any manner interfering with the said boiler and engine; and (e) that plaintiff have such other and further relief as may be j-ust and equitable. Judge Buchanan passed an order providing an injunction as prayed for pending the suit. Under an order of reference, testimony was offered by both sides to the controversy before *112 E. W. Simkins, Esq., as referee, who made his report to the Court. On exceptions to said report the case came on to be heard before his Honor, Judge Gage, who decreed in part as follows:

“I agree with the referee as to the amount found by him to be due by the defendants, B. E. Knight and A. L. Ballentine, to the plaintiff, but I cannot agree with the referee in finding and holding that the sale by William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine under the Sullivan Hardware Company mortgage was valid and should stand. I am satisfied from the testimony that William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine knew of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and that the sale made by them was at the time it was, and in the manner it was, at the instance of the defendant, B. E. Knight, and was an attempt on the part of the said defendants to defeat the lien of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and the said sale should be set aside.
“The plaintiff is entitled to have his mortgage foreclosed. The property should be sold under the order of this Court, and after payment of the plaintiff’s costs of this action, the proceeds should be applied to the payment of the amount due William B. Knight and John A. Ballentine on the Sullivan Hardware Company mortgage, which amount is $33, and the balance, or so much as may be necessary, should be applied to the payment of the indebtedness of B. E. Knight and A. E. Ballentine to the plaintiff. The temporary injunction should be made perpetual. It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that' the defendants’ exceptions to the referee’s report be, and they are hereby, overruled, and the plaintiff’s exceptions inconsistent herewith are also' overruled, and such exceptions of the plaintiff as are consistent herewith are sustained.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiff have judgment against the defendants, B. E. Knight and A. E. Ballentine, for the sum of $198.95, and for $15.89 attorney’s fees.”

Then follows the appropriate orders for sale and injunc

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Related

Lyon v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry.
58 S.E. 12 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 589, 66 S.C. 107, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battey-v-knight-sc-1903.