Cox v. Enterprise Bank

104 S.E. 693, 115 S.C. 191, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 12, 1920
Docket10516
StatusPublished

This text of 104 S.E. 693 (Cox v. Enterprise Bank) 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
Cox v. Enterprise Bank, 104 S.E. 693, 115 S.C. 191, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 198 (S.C. 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage. '

The cause is in equity. It is an action by Cox, the maker, against the Enterprise Bank, the grantee of a deed to 969 acres of land in the suburbs of Columbia, and to have that transaction declared to be a mortgage. Sundry judgment creditors of Cox are parties.

The Circuit Court held: (1) That the true nature of the transaction betwixt Cox and the bank was that a debtor and creditor, and that the deed was in fact a mortgage; and (2) that the deed was made to secure a then present debt of some $3,000, and such other debts as Cox might thereafter come to owe the bank; and that the record of the deed was effective to give notice to the creditors of Cox, though record of it was made on the “deed book,” and not on the “mortgage book,” of the register’s office; and (3) the sale of certain parts of the land by Cox to purchasers and the rights arising thereout could not be finally determined in this action, because such purchasers were not parties; and (4) that certain rents for parts of the land to be paid by the United States government were not due to be paid directly to Cox, but to the bank.

The exceptions, in one form or another, challenge all the conclusions of the Circuit Court, so that we shall consider in order the aforementioned four postulates, but following *195 up the appellant’s printed argument, and taking up now the first exception.

The answer of the bank admitted that the deed “was intended to be and should have the effect of a mortgage,” and that Cox “remained in posséssion of the lands.” So there was never an issue about these two circumstances; the Court was bound to so find the facts.

The appellant has consolidated exceptions 2, 3, '4 and 6; and he says:

“The substance of them is that this mortgage only secured the sum of $3,000 and that, upon the payment of that sum, less installments paid, plus interest, Cox was entitled to have a reconveyance, or the deed canceled upon the record.”

1 It is suggested in the brief that, while the Court found as matter of law that the deed was intended to secure the then present debt of Cox to the bank, and such other debt as Cox might contract, yet the Court did not find the amount of that other debt. But the Court was dealing wth a master’s report, and we assume that when the Court wrote, “All sums advanced by the bank as set forth and contended for in the proceedings before the master,” the Court meant to adopt the report, and that it was specific about Cox’s entire debt.

2 The testimony tends to show that the agreement between Cox and the bank included the then debt of $3,000, and such other debt as Cox might contract; and the conclusion of the Circuit Court thereabout will not be disturbed. If so much be true, the appellant seems to concede that ordinarily such an agreement as the future debts will be enforced. Walker v. Walker, 17 S. C. 333; Levi v. Blackwell, 35 S. C. 510, 15 S. E. 243. But so much is denied in a case where the mortgagee happens to be in possession, and the appellant cites Act 1791, 5 Stats., par. 2, p. 170; Act 1879, 17 Stats., p. 19; Sims v. Steadman, 62 S. C. 300, 40 S. E. 677.

*196 It is said by the appellant that the result of the statutes cited above is that “a mortgagee in possession is deemed owner of the land.” But that is a misconception of the statute of 1791, with the proviso stricken out. As was stated in Sims v. Steadman, the act of 1791 was directed only to remedies, as that word is technically distinguished from rights. The act of 1791 denied to a mortgagee (out of possession by implication) a possessory action; and the proviso only declared, among other things, that so much was not applicable to a case when the mortgagee by implication might be in possession. Of course not, for in such a case there was no need of a possessory action. More than this, the act of 1791 had express reference to law actions, and not to causes in equity like the present. In a Court of equity before the act of 1791 and since, too, the mortgagor was and is considered the owner, and the mortgagee was and is regarded only as but a lien creditor. See Durand v. Isaacks, 4 McCord, 55; Stoney v. Schultz, 1 Hill Eq. 465. Besides this, the appellant contends in another branch of the argument, and for other purposes, “that Cbx was in possession.”

3 There is no merit in the fifth exception; the Court was not bound to have inquiry made about who had purchased parcels from Cox; the purchasers were not parties, and any inquiry or decree thereabout would have been futile. If the plaintiff is interested in that issue, as he says he is, his remedy is plain.

4 The seventh exception makes issue, about the disposal of certain rent money due by the Federal government for the occupancy of the land; Cox claims to have it in preference to his creditors. The appellant relies for authority on Reeder v. Dargan, 15 S. C. 175. The facts differentiate that case from this. Here the government was in possession of the land, and is due to pay the rent to somebody. Certainly the debtor is not entitled to have it *197 if so much is required to meet the obligations due by him. See McSween v. Windham, 104 S. C. 518, 89 S. E. 500.

5 We come now to consider the one exception argued by the judgment creditors. That exception is that the deed in issue was not notice to the other and now judgment creditors of Cox, because it was not properly recorded, which means that it was not in law recorded at all. The exact contention is that the instrument was not spread upon what the appellant styles the “mortgage book,” •but was, on the contrary, spread upon what the appellant calls the “deed book.”. The issue to me decided is one of statutory construction. There are two portions of the statute relevant to the issue, sections 1355 and 3542, Code of Laws. The latter section prescribes what instruments shall be recorded, the former section prescribes how the record shall be effected, and it is, therefore, the dominant statute, for the instrument in issue is confessedly in form a conveyance, and as such it was properly recorded in the book which counsel styles “deed book.” But the statute does not direct that conveyances of real estate shall be recorded in one book, and that mortgages shall be recorded in a separate book; and we need not' go further than the statute. All it requires is the conveyances, mortgages, etc., shall be recorded in “well-bound books,” etc.

It is true that the general, if not the universal, practice of the recording officers has been and is to supply two “well-bound books,” and to mark one of these “deeds” and to mark the other of these “mortgages,” and to make record of instruments in one or the other of these books according to the judgment and practice of the officer; and that practice would doubtless be stistained in cases which might involve its correctness. The instant is not such a case.

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Related

Sims v. Steadman
40 S.E. 677 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1902)
McSween v. Windham
89 S.E. 500 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1916)
Levi v. Blackwell
15 S.E. 243 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 693, 115 S.C. 191, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-enterprise-bank-sc-1920.