Ellison v. McCullough
This text of 31 S.C.L. 170 (Ellison v. McCullough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
If the two notes represent what was left unpaid of the purchase money, then the balance, after deducting from their sum the liens, is $118 67. If we go back and look to the payments of which any evidence has been given,.then $200 paid and the liens deducted from $700, the consideration expressed in the deed, will leave a balance of $152 67. Why should not this note be paid from either of these balances 7
[172]*172The defendant objects that the note for $350* is outstanding in 'the hands of Mattison. Peradven ture payment of that note may never be claimed. But if it should be, this one was assigned first, and, therefore, is entitled to maintain the precedence which the priority of suit alone might give it. If both notes had remained in Smith’s hands, and this one had first been brought to trial, recovery upon it would have been had, and that recovery would have gone with the payments made upon the liens, to diminish the balance applicable to the other. If both notes had been assigned at the same instant to their present owners, equity might have apportioned between them the balance insufficient for payment of both, but probably the law would have applied the maxim, prior tempore potior jure.
Broom’s L. M. 329.
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31 S.C.L. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellison-v-mccullough-scctapp-1845.