DeLoach v. Sarratt

35 S.E. 441, 55 S.C. 254, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 3, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 441 (DeLoach v. Sarratt) 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
DeLoach v. Sarratt, 35 S.E. 441, 55 S.C. 254, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 142 (S.C. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

When A. A. Sarratt and M. P. Sarratt, his wife, began their married life in the month of November, 1868, they occupied a tract of land known as Chulahoma, containing 430 acres, more, or less, belonging tO’ the estate of A. O. Walker, deceased, who' was the father of Mrs. M. P. Sarratt. In the year 1870, the said A. A. Sarratt and M. P. Sarratt, his wife, as plaintiffs, began a suit [258]*258against the widow and children of the said A. O. Walker, and also his administrator, as defendants, in the Probate Court for Union County, in order that the lands of the estate of A. O. Walker, deceased, might be partitioned amongst his widow and children. In the year 1874, on the return of commissioners in partition, such lands were so partitioned, and the Chulahoma tract was assigned to the plaintiffs, A. A. Sarratt and M. P. Sarratt, valued at over $4,000, and this amount being in excess of Mrs. M. P. Sarratt’s share by some $1,600, she was ordered to mortgage the same to secure the payment of the said $1,600, to such heirs at law of A. O. Walker, deceased, as were not given lands of equal value, so as to equalize the shares therein. As years rolled on, A. A. Sarratt purchased and took title in his own name to a tract of land known as the King tract, containing 365 acres. On the 27th November, 1880, A. A. Sarratt purchased from James E. DeLoach and Elizabeth, his wife, a tract containing 1,200 acres, at the price of $20,000, payable at the expiration of ten years from the year 1880, and bearing five per cent, interest per annum, payable each year, and executed a mortgage of the 1,200 acres to them to secure said debt, both principal and interest. Mrs. M. P. Sarratt earnestly opposed the purchase by her husband of this 1,200 acres of land. In the year 1883, the said A. A. Sarratt sold to his wife’s brother, S. O. Walker, ninety-eight acres off of the Chulahoma tract of land at the price of $2,000, and made his deed alone for it. This sale of ninety-eight acres off of the Chulahoma tract left it containing 332 acres. From the date of his purchase of the DeLoach lands, and especially about the year 1883, A. A. Sarratt expended considerable sums of money in the improvement of such lands; he cleared. forty or fifty acres of original forest -for cultivation; he added an “L” to the original dwelling house; he built eleven tenant houses with brick chimneys; he erected a two-story grain house; he built a new gin house and repaired the old one; he constructed a large stable, fifteen feet by thirty feet. His estimate was that such improvement's cost in the neigh[259]*259borhood of $5,000. One of his witnesses estimated the buildings erected at over $2,000. Two of plaintiff’s witnesses, while not denying the erection of the improvements and the clearing of the land, did not value the cost thereof at anything like his figures. Each year from 1880 for eight years, A. A. Sarratt paid the DeLoachs $1,000 as the interest on $20,000, at five per cent, .per annum. In the year 1884, A. A. Sarratt conveyed the King tract of land, containing 365 acres, to John B. Foster, the purchase money being secured by a mortgage. John B. Foster, not being able to pay the purchase money of the King tract of land, reconveyed the same to A. A. Sarratt in the year 1886. In the year 1888, on the 12th November, Mrs. M. P. Sarratt purchased the Woolbright tract of land, containing 295 acres. In the year 1889, A. A. Sarratt purchased the Thompson Mill tract, containing ninety acres. Up to the year 1890, there was no encumbrance upon the lands or other property'of A. A. Sarratt except the mortgage over the 1,200 acres of the DeLoach lands to J. E. and Elizabeth DeLoach. But on 23d April of the year 1890, A. A. Sarratt mortgaged the King tract, of 365 acres and the Thompson Mill tract of ninety acres, to J. J. Magness, to secure a note to said Magness for $1,500, and also a note of A. A. Sarratt to J. N. Wood, with J. J. Magness as his surety, for the loan of $3,000, due in twelve months; and in 1891, A. A. Sarratt having made default in the payment of his debt to Wood, the two tracts mortgaged by A. A. Sarratt to J. J. Magness were sold by A. N. Wood at public sale at Union C. H., and purchased by Mrs. M. P. Sarratt at the price of $3,000, and deed was made in name of A. A. Sarratt by A. N. Wood, his attorney in fact, to Mrs. M. P. Sarratt. James E. DeLoach and Elizabeth DeLoach, his wife, commenced their action against A. A. Sarratt on 1st March, 1890, to foreclose their mortgage on the 1,200 acres of land, and also to recover judgment for any deficiency that might be after a sale of said lands to pay the mortgage debt; and on the 13th day of October, 1891, a decree was rendered ordering a sale of said [260]*260lands under a division into several tracts instead of in one body. Sale was made under such decree on the 4th day of January, 1892, of all the 1,200 acres of land. Mrs. M. P. Sarratt purchased 185 7-10 acres thereof at $2,000. The sale realized a sufficient amount to pay on the amount of judgment on that day of $23,302.82 to reduce the judgment to $11,201.24. This last amount, being the deficiency, was reported to the Court, and by such Court made its judgment on the 15th October, 1892, which judgment having been duly enrolled, an execution was issued thereon on the 20th October, 1892. This exectttion, on the 7Ü1 day of January, 1893, was returned by the sheriff as follows: “The within named A. A. Sarratt has not any goods or chattels, lands, tenements or hereditaments, within Union County, whereof I can levy, as within commanded.” On the first day of May, 1894, James E. DeLoach departed this life. On the day of March, 1896, Elizabeth DeLoach, as plaintiff, commenced an action against Mary P. Sarratt and A. A. Sarratt, as defendants, by a summons and complaint, wherein she-alleged the origin and developed history of the bond and mortgage of A. Á. Saratt for $20,000, dated 26th November, 1880, to James E. DeLoach and Elizabeth De-Loach, including the suit of the latter against A. A. Sarratt thereupon — the sale of mortgaged 1,200 acres of land — the application of the proceeds of sale to such bond, and the fact that there was a deficiencj'- of over $11,000 thereof, which deficiency was put into' a judgment against A. A. Sarratt on the 20th October, 1892, and that execution was duly issued for the recovery of such deficiency, and that on the 7th day of January, 1893, J. G. Long, as sheriff of Union County, returned such execution nulla bona. That she is the survivor of James E. DeLoach and Elizabeth DeLoach. The complaint also alleges in paragraph

“Fourth. That quite recently, and since the return of nulla bona by the sheriff, in the manner above set forth, the plaintiff has learned, been informed and believes, that A. A. Sarratt, for a number of years prior to the commencement of [261]*261the action mentioned and described in the first and second paragraphs hereof, and up to a ’ comparatively short time before the institution of said action, was seized and possessed of lands in Union County, in the State aforesaid, to the amount of 2,245 acres, the said A. A. Sarratt having, instead of paying the instalments of his mortgage indebtedness to James E. and Elizabeth DeLoach, as they became due, made purchases of real estate up to and as late as the 4th day of December; 1889, for which he paid large sums of money, aggregating at least $4,600 (all of which was made by his farming operations on the DeLoach tract), thereby swelling the aggregate number of acres owned and possessed by the said A. A.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 441, 55 S.C. 254, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deloach-v-sarratt-sc-1899.