Ex Parte Rosenfeld

51 S.E.2d 88, 214 S.C. 39, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1948
Docket16158
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 51 S.E.2d 88 (Ex Parte Rosenfeld) 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
Ex Parte Rosenfeld, 51 S.E.2d 88, 214 S.C. 39, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 9 (S.C. 1948).

Opinion

Stukes, Justice:

Appellant was engaged in the year 1943 in the operation of several State-licensed, retail liquor stores, one of which was in Darlington. The license of the Darlington store was first suspended and then renewal was refused because of alleged violations of ceiling sales prices. W. J. Langley, now deceased, was employed for many years as a clerk in the store and was paid a salary of $15.00 per week plus a bonus of $5.00 to $10.00. With the aid of a local attorney, license for the subsequent operation of the store was obtained by Langley and the stock of goods transferred to him, whereupon he executed a rental agreement covering the store building, which was owned by appellant, and a lengthy written contract with the latter which was also in terms a chattel mortgage.

This instrument is the controlling document in the case and its more important contents will be briefed. First it purports to evidence a sale of the liquor on hand to Langley who agreed to purchase on credit for $1,255.72. Appellant *41 was obligated to advance the moneys necessary to obtain State and Federal licenses ($307.50) and additional unnamed sums for expenses, and further advances of not ex-ceeding $1,500.00 every thirty days in order to maintain a liquor stock of not less than $2,000.00 wholesale inventory. Langley promised to repay these sums, including those afterward advanced under the terms of the contract, together with seven per cent annual interest thereon, at the rate of $25.00 per week, until principal and interest should be paid. Langley was required to make an accounting to appellant upon demand at any time and pay over all funds then in hand. Daily, detailed sales records should be kept and the proceeds deposited each day in the name of Langley in a designated bank. Operating expenses and purchases should be paid by checks on the bank account and Langley was limited to $15-.00 per week for himself and, with appellant’s approval, $3.00 per week for additional help. It was further provided that all receipts of Langley from the operation of the store should be held by him in trust for application to the payments provided by the agreement. There was a penalty clause'whereby violation by Langley of any of the terms of the agreement should give rise to an optional right of appellant to forthwith foreclose the lien created by the agreement upon the stock of liquors and the funds deposited from the sales, with surplus, if any, above the indebtedness, and the costs and expenses of foreclosure, reverting to Langley.

This written agreement and mortgage was dated Aug. 1, 1943, executed by both parties in the presence of the draftsman-attorney’s stenographer and the Clerk of Court at the latter’s office, and was duly probated before the Clerk but not recorded.

Langley became ill a few weeks after he took possession and began operation of the liquor store and it was conducted by members of his family during the few remaining weeks until his death on Oct. 27, 1943. Appellant made unsuccessful effort to have Langley’s widow as administratrix of his *42 estate continue the operation of the store. The Probate Judge declined approval of this proposed arrangement and another was appointed administrator of the estate. Pie is respondent in this proceeding.

Appellant filed claim against the estate showing a balance of indebtedness to him of $2,195.71. It consisted of items which included the amount of the inventory of liquors at the time Langley took charge of the store, cash advances, thereafter made, invoices paid, State and Federal licenses, bond premium, attorney’s fee, insurance premium, and finally the cost of telegrams and a trip to Columbia, which last items appellant testified were expended in his efforts to procure liquors for the business. Eight credits at about weekly intervals aggregated $3,610.46, and there was an additional'credit, entered as “paid on invoices”, of $1,315.00.

Upon contest of the claim the Probate Judge held a hearing and took testimony which is in the record and from which the foregoing facts have been derived. He disapproved payment upon the ground that the agreement and arrangement between appellant and Langley was a subterfuge to evade the law with respect to the operation of liquor stores and that the business in reality continued to be that of appellant ; that the evidence established that the State was misled by appellant or it would not have issued the license to Langley ; and the court should not lend its aid to the enforcement of the agreement which was against public policy and, therefore, unlawful.

The matter was heard by the Court of Common Pleas on appeal from the Probate Court and the judgment of the latter was affirmed, particularly that the claim against the estate of Langley was based upon an agreement and arrangement which was unenforceable for violation of public policy.

There were objections on trial to the competency of various portions of the evidence but all of it was considered and the former questions thereabout have disappeared from the case for lack of preservation of them upon appeal.

*43 The exceptions, of course, make the issues here and appellant’s contentious can be conveniently set forth by reproduction of his exceptions, except the fourth which is too general for consideration. They are as follows:

“1. That the Court erred, it is respectfully submitted, in finding and holding that the contract and chattel mortgage entered into between claimant and deceased was contrary to public policy and unlawful when there was not a scintilla of competent evidence to support such a finding and all of the competent evidence proved that the contract and chattel mortgage was legitimate and sanctioned by the laws of this State.
“2. That the Court erred, it is respectfully submitted, in finding that the agreement and arrangement between claimant and deceased was nothing' more than an arrangement whereby claimant was operating the liquor store in the name of the intestate when the only reasonable inference from the testimony is to the contrary and that claimant was forced to sell the liquor store and that the arrangement and agreement entered into was nothing more than an attempt by appellant to protect the money which the purchaser owed him as a result of this purchase.
“3. That the Court erred, it is respectfully submitted, in finding that the acts of claimant in the management and control of the business showed that claimant looked to the profits of the business rather than interest upon the debt owed when there was no testimony’’ of any acts by the claimant in the management of the business or any interference in the management of the business other than those acts which had as their purpose to see that the business continued to operate and that the inventory and money on hand and the withdrawals from thé business be open to inspection so that claimant as creditor might be in a position to protect his lien.”

There was no evidence that appellant was to get more out of the venture than the value of his stock of goods, the cash advances to be made by him, and in *44 terest on the whole until paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.E.2d 88, 214 S.C. 39, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-rosenfeld-sc-1948.