First Carolinas Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbia v. DuBose

186 S.E. 514, 181 S.C. 40, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 3, 1936
Docket14325
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 186 S.E. 514 (First Carolinas Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbia v. DuBose) 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
First Carolinas Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbia v. DuBose, 186 S.E. 514, 181 S.C. 40, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 156 (S.C. 1936).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Baker.

During the year, 1923, O. W. Windham obtained a loan from the respondent on its regular thirty-three-year amortization plan, which provided that the failure to make any payment when due would cause the full amount to become payable at once upon the option of the mortgagee. This loan was secured by a mortgage on three tracts of land containing 123 acres, one of which contained 43 acres, and for convenience will be referred to as “Tract A.” About two years later Windham executed to W. J. DuBose a purchase-money mortgage for $5,200.00 on a 40-acre tract that day bought from DuBose, and included therein as additional security “Tract A.” About a month thereafter AVindham for the express consideration of $5.00 and assumption of mortgage indebtedness conveyed all of his property to his wife,Fannie. In 1931, O. W. Windham and Fannie, his wife, soíd and conveyed by usual deed “Tract A” to W. J. Du-Bose for the express consideration of $3,000.00, the actual consideration being an agreement by W, J. DuBos.e to pay the notes and mortgage of O. W. .Windham to respondent as. the payments became due. About eight months thereafter, in December of 1931, DuBose reconveyed “Tract A” to Fannie and Ollie Windham upon the agreement that- the contract of assumption theretofore agreed upon be rescinded..

*57 Respondent in February, 1932, brought an action against Ollie and Fannie Windham, W. J. DuBose, and others, and alleged that under the agreement between W. J. DuBose and Windham, he, DuBose, had assumed the payment of the debt from Ollie Windham to respondent and was liable to it for any deficiency. Fannie and Ollie Windham by cross-answer claimed certain rights against ■ DuBose, alleged fraud and damages, and sought recovery on their own part also against him. All of these matters between the Windhams and Du-Bose have been adjudicated by a finding of the Circuit Judge favorable to DuBose, as has also been concluded by the same decree the contention of DuBose that his agreement was within the. Statute of Frauds, there having been no appeal from such holding by any party in interest. The record also discloses that there has been a settlement betwixt the Windhams and DuBose in relation to all land transactions, and the 40-acre tract (not connected with the lands going to make up the 123 acres mortgaged to respondent) has been reconveyed by the Windhams to DuBose.

Accordingly, the questions presented to this Court are, first, whether an agreement between grantor, and grantee whereby the grantee assumes payment of an existing mortgage debt on the property conveyed can be by such original parties rescinded before acceptance by the mortgagee; and, second, whether in this particular case there has been such acceptance on the part of the mortgagee.

A more detail statement could serve no useful purpose in a determination of the two questions presented, one of fact and the other of law.

The only evidence presented on the part of the respondent to show an acceptance on its part is to the effect that one of the installments being delinquent after the deed to DuBose, its agent called upon Windham for the payment, and Windham advised the respondent of the conveyance to DuBose and advised taking up the matter with DuBose, who made the payment. Thereafter, when an *58 installment again became delinquent respondent again demanded payment of Windham, and when the agent went to DuBose at the request of Windham the second time, the agent was advised that he, DuBose, would make no further payments and expected to reconvey the property to the Windhams and settle any claim against him. The fact that respondent, after receipt of one payment by DuBose, gave DuBose no notice of other payments, and in no manner dealt with him concerning the contract, and, upon the happening of another delinquency, again called on Windham and took up with DuBose at his request when he was advised of the agreement to reconvey, shows that it refused to accept the agreement between Windham and DuBose, and received the one payment from DuBose as a payment in Windham’s behalf, and'not originally as a claim against DuBose. After the conveyance back by DuBose, and in 1932, without the appointment of a receiver or any notice to DuBose, the agent of the respondent took charge of the property and had the Windhams execute to it a rent contract for the year 1932. The actual conduct of the respondent is conclusive that there was no acceptance by it.

This leaves for consideration the legal issue first stated. While this Court has held in numerous cases and it is the settled law of this jurisdiction, that one assuming by grant the existing liens against the grantor is held to such- agreement in the.absence of contractual relations with the lien holder or mortgagee, such decisions will be found to have always revolved about a situation where the original mortgagor and grantor had never released the grantee who assumed the debt. Such is true of South Carolina Insurance Company v. Kohn, 108 S. C., 475, 95 S. E., 65, and in fact all other decisions in our jurisdiction. Here the mortgagor (grantor) and grantee have formally rescinded their agreement, and the original mortgagee has not only failed to accept such agreement, but has failed; after notice of its existence, to recognize it until after its rescission.

*59 While there is a conflict of authority in the jurisdictions elsewhere, the better reason and the greater weight of authority is that such an agreement to assume a debt is binding between the grantor and grantee from the moment of its execution, but inures to the benefit of the mortgagee only after his acceptance. As the grantor continues liable to the mortgagee regardless of his agreement with the grantee, unless by the mortgagee released, there can be little advantage to him until concluding a contract with the mortgagee releasing him, and this is particularly true in these long time loans that extend beyond the life expectancy of the usual borrower; the future financial worth of any one over such a length of time is a most doubtful business security. The agreement is b.eyond the security, is originally between grantor and grantee, and when these two original parties rescinded their agreement no damages can possibly be sustained by the mortgagee unless he has by contract, expressed or implied, bound the grantee to the payment. It was not his contract, he paid nor received any consideration, nor was he a party to it, and he may greatly prefer the original borrower as the occupant of the farm. As said in Shult v. Doyle, 200 Iowa, 1, 201 N. W., 787, 790, cited in 47 A. L. R., 344, note:

“The cause of action thus created in his favor is .a bit of legal grace; it cost him nothing; it simply fell upon him, without effort or knowledge on his part. He is entitled to it, such as it is. He has no ground for appeal to equity either to. expand it or. to prevent its shrinkage.”
“Release by grantor, (a) Before acceptance by mortgagee.” “In the majority of jurisdictions it is held that á contract between a mortgagor and his grántee, whereby the' latter- assumes and agrees to pay the mortgage debt, may be rescinded at any time before the mortgagee has accepted the agreement or asserted his rights thereunder.” Note 21 A. L.

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Related

In Re Houston
409 B.R. 799 (D. South Carolina, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.E. 514, 181 S.C. 40, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-carolinas-joint-stock-land-bank-of-columbia-v-dubose-sc-1936.