Fox v. Fox
This text of 92 S.E. 477 (Fox v. Fox) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Defendant appeals from judgment for plaintiff for the possession of personal property claimed by plaintiff under a chattel mortgage signed by defendant and dated November 4, 1908, purporting to secure defendant’s sealed note to plaintiff of same date for $400 due October 1, 1909.
Defendant alleged and sought to prove that the note and mortgage were without consideration, and that they had never been delivered to plaintiff, except as custodian thereof for defendant. He offered testimony tending to prove that his real purpose in executing the note and mortgage was to obtain a loan from a bank by making the note and mortgage to plaintiff, who is his mother, with the intention of getting her to indorse the note, so that he could use it to get the money from the bank to pay certain creditors who were pressing him; that he had his attorney prepare the papers for that purpose, inserting therein the amount necessary to pay the claims then being pressed; that he had the mortgage recorded, and handed the papers to plaintiff, saying, “Mother, here is a paper I want you tó keep for me a few days;” that he afterwards made some other arrangement with the creditors who were pressing him, so that it became unnecessary for him to perfect the loan; that thereafter, on December 10, 1908, plaintiff executed a receipt, under seal, which was introduced in evidence, and purported to be for *253 $400 “in full payment of the mortgage” dated November 4th.
On the other hand, plaintiff contended that the note and mortgage were given to secure her for pre-existing debts due and owing to her by defendant, to wit, various sums of money that she had let him have at different times, and her interest in a tract of land which she had conveyed to him, under agreement that he would sell it and pay her half the proceeds. She denied executing the receipt dated December 10th, saying that she never heard of it until it was introduced at the trial.
The testimony upon the issues of fact stated was conflicting. The Court ruled that defendant could prove that there had been no delivery of the note and mortgage to plaintiff, but that he could not prove that they were delivered to her for the purpose stated by him, unless he informed her of his purpose at the time of the delivery; also that, as the note and mortgage were under seal, defendant could not show that they were without consideration, by showing the real purpose for which they had been executed and that that purpose had been abandoned.
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Judgment reversed and new trial granted.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
92 S.E. 477, 107 S.C. 250, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-fox-sc-1917.