Brown v. Sartor

69 S.E. 88, 87 S.C. 116, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 14, 1910
Docket7683
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 88 (Brown v. Sartor) 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
Brown v. Sartor, 69 S.E. 88, 87 S.C. 116, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 111 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The plaintiff C. P. Brown brought this action to foreclose a mortgage for $5,000 given by AV. *118 H. Sartor on May 1st, 1905, and recorded on May 2nd, 1905. There is no dispute as to the validity, priority and amount of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and in the consideration of the case that debt will be left out of view entirely; but other creditors of W. H. Sartor were made parties defendant and there are complex questions to be decided as to the rights of these creditors against each other in the distribution of the surplus proceeds of sale after satisfaction of the plaintiff’s mortgage. The following statement shows the nature and status of the claims of these creditors:

1. Note and mortgage to Charles T. Tamsburg, $1:2,141.98, dated October 6th, 19Q5, but not recorded until January 6th, 1908, now owned by Thos. Barrett and others, trustees of the bankrupt estate of Inman & Company.

2. Note and mortgage to J. A. Brown, $7,198, and attorney’s fees, dated April 18th, 1907, but not recorded until November 27th, 1907, now oymed by W. FI. Gist and others, receivers of the Pepples Bank of Union.

3. Notes to Merchants National Bank of Richmond, Virginia, for debt contracted after the execution of the two mortgages just mentioned without notice of their existence by record or otherwise. Upon these notes judgment was recovered for $8,911.73 on May 28th, 1908, after both mortgages were recorded.

' 4. A debuto Union Building & Roan Association reduced to judgment September 19th, 1908, for $831.44.

5. Nptes- held by J. W. Norwood for a debt contracted after the execution of the mortgages without notice of their existence by record or otherwise, amounting to $28,999.99. This debt has never been reduced to judgment

The amounts above stated are taken from the report of the master and are set out for the purposes of identification. The statement does not affect the power of the Circuit Court to correct any mistakes in the computation. The cause was referred to the master and his report was passed on and modified by the Circuit Court. For the sake of brevity, we *119 refrain from making a detailed statement of the reasoning and conclusions of the master and the Circuit Judge, and proceed with the application of the principles which seem to us determinative of the rights of the parties.

As to the judgment of the Union Building & Loan Association, the master reported: “The judgment of the Union Building & Loan Association by consent of counsel representing it, is placed on an equality with the simple contract creditors.” We understand this to mean that the Union Building & Loan Association claims no rights either as a lien creditor or as a subsequent creditor without notice of the mortgages. None of the exceptions, either to the master’s report or to the decree of the Circuit Court, refer to this claim. Its status being fixed by consent, it will be entirely disregarded in the consideration of the rights of the contending creditors.

All agree that neither the mortgage held by Barrett and others, as trustees, nor the mortgage held by Gist and others, as receivers, can have any preference over the Merchants Bank of Richmond or J. W. Norwood, for the reason that the mortgages were not recorded within the time required by statute, and the Merchants Bank and Norwood became creditors of Sartor without notice of these mortgages. This being so, Norwood claims, as between him and the other creditors, that his right is to have the entire proceeds of sale remaining after the payment of the plaintiff’s mortgage applied pro rata to the payment of his debt along with the two mortgage debts and the debt of the Merchants Bank now in judgment. In opposition to this claim of Norwood, the Merchants Bank insists that by obtaining judgment on its claim it acquired a lien on the property by reason of which it is entitled to have the entire proceeds of sale applied to the satisfaction of its debt to the exclusion of the mortgage debts and the debt of Norwood, which is not in judgment.

Laying aside for the moment the claim of' the mortgagees against each other, we consider first whether’ the Merchants *120 Bank has, by virtue of its judgment, any preference over the mortgages. The precise point here involved has not been decided under our statute, but from a consideration of the scope and object of the statute on the subject, (Civil Code, section 2456), it seems perfectly clear that the judgment has no such preference over the mortgages. The statute makes the mortgages of no effect against the Merchants Bank and Norwood as subsequent creditors without notice, because of the lack of record within forty days. But the statute also provides that the recording “subsequent to the expiration of said forty days shall from the date of such record operate as notice to all who may subsequently thereto become creditors or purchasers.” The right of subsequent creditors to assert mortgages not recorded within the statutory time to be void as against them is fixed by the statute and cannot be changed by the recording out of time. If the ¿rlbsequent creditór has no lien at the time of the recording cbeyond the forty'days, then he stands on an equal .footing [with the mortgage creditor; if he has acquired a lien, then he xggjist be satisfied first. But for all other purposes, after the mortgage has been recorded, though after the statutory limit, it «is to be regarded as if a mortgage had been made as of the day of record, having a lien from the date of the recording winch cannot be displaced by any lien subsequently acquired by record or otherwise. This is the principle laid down in Steele v. Mansell, 6 Rich. 442; King v. Fazier, 23 S. C. 543, and Carraway v. Carraway, 27 S. C. 576, 5 S. E. 157. That this must be true seems clear from the fact that the limitations upon the validity of mortgages recorded out of time depend entirely upon the terms of the statute; and the statute contains no provision that a subsequent creditor may take a mortgage, or enter a judgment, or acquire a lien in any other way, after the recording of a prior mortgage, jWhich will be superior to such prior mortgage. The rule /which the statute was intended to establish, and, we think, 1 its plain meaning, is that mortgages not recorded within the *121 time fixed are invalid as to subsequent creditors whose debts were contracted before actual record, but that after actual record no superior lien can be acquired by judgment oy otherwise. Therefore as against the mortgage creditors, the 1 Merchants Bank, notwithstanding its judgment, can claim no right beyond a pro rata distribution of the surplus proceeds,/ of the sale of the land.

The next inquiry is, whether the Merchants Bank has any right to be preferred to Norwood? If the Merchants Bank and Norwood were the only claimants, it would not be doubted that the Merchants Bank, as a creditor having a judgment lien, would be entitled to have its judgment debt satisfied before anything could be paid to Norwood, who is a creditor without a lien. The presence of the mortgage creditors in the case cannot affect the principle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 88, 87 S.C. 116, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-sartor-sc-1910.