Gilbert v. Easterling

60 S.E.2d 595, 217 S.C. 267, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 5, 1950
Docket16378
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 60 S.E.2d 595 (Gilbert v. Easterling) 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
Gilbert v. Easterling, 60 S.E.2d 595, 217 S.C. 267, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 119 (S.C. 1950).

Opinion

Baker, Chief Justice.

In 1947, James M. Easterling and Leland Richard Easter-ling, appearing in the caption as the sole respondents, although as will hereinafter be seen, Eoraine Easterling is also a respondent and is the one chiefly interested, purchased from the appellants, Verlie Gilbert and Theodosia Gilbert, a tract of land in Darlington County containing 430 acres, more or less, the purchase price being $10,000.00. At the time of the conveyance of this land to said James M. Easter-ling and Leland Richard Easterling, they paid $1,000.00, and the balance of $9,000.00 was secured by a purchase price niortgage, payable in nine equal annual installments, with interest from date at 6 per cent, per annum, the first installment of $1,000.00, and interest on the whole, becoming due October 1, 1948. The mortgagors failed to make the first payment, but did pay on January 12, 1949, the installment of $1,000.00, and $100.00 on the interest. No other payment on the mortgage was made.

The mortgagees, appellants herein, on July 13, 1949, paid insurance premiums amounting to $72.50 to protect certain buildings which were on this land when it was conveyed to the mortgagors, and on, August 12, 1949, paid the past due taxes. No portion of the insurance premiums and taxes paid *270 had any relation to the building or residence from which the issue presented by this appeal stems.

Mr. L. N. Gilbert, who apparently resides in or near Hartsville, in the County of Darlington, testified that he was the agent of his sisters, the appellants herein, in the handling of this property, and the record as a whole is corroborative of such fact. He has handled every detail in connection with this land from the time the two Easterling brothers were bargaining to purchase same, and ever since

In the first part of January, 1949, Loraine Easterling, a brother of James M. and Leland Richard Easterling, and a World War II veteran, desiring to build a residence, but owning no land on which to erect same, entered into an agreement with his brothers who held the legal title to this 430 acre tract of land which permitted him to build on the south-west corner thereof, a four room dwelling, the understanding being if his brothers paid the mortgage thereon, they would give him one acre including the portion where he built this residence, and if they couldn’t pay the mortgage, then he could move this house. Notwithstanding this agreement with his brothers, before constructing his residence on this land, Loraine Easterling and Leland Richard Easterling had a conversation with L. N. Gilbert in reference to the building of this house on the land, and according to their testimony, Mr. Gilbert told Loraine “to go ahead and he would give him the piece of land; that it would be worth that much to the place.” Mr. Gilbert denies having any such conversation with Loraine and his brother Leland Richard Easterling. Be that as it may, Loraine Easterling, in January, 1949, built at his own expense a very nice four room home on the south-west corner of this 430 acre tract of land, and occupied same. We gather from the record that he also built some outhouses thereon.

On August 20, 1949, the appellants commenced their action for the foreclosure of the real estate mortgage given by James M. and Leland Richard Easterling. While this action *271 was pending, and in the early part of September, 1949, it is in the record that Goraine Easterling and Eeland Richard Easterling entered into an additional agreement with L. N. Gilbert that it James M. Easterling and Leland Richard Easterling would convey this land back to the appellants, and thus save the expense of foreclosure, he would give Goraine Easterling a deed to one acre of the land on which Goraine had built his home, and thus set at rest any issue which could arise as to moving the house. In accord therewith, and on September 8, 1949, a deed was prepared in the office of the appellants’ attorneys, there signed by Geland Richard Easterling and dower renounced by his wife, and delivered to Goraine, who carried it to Washington, D. C., at his own expense where James M. Easterling was then residing, in order to procure his signature thereto. Upon returning with the deed properly excuted by James M. Easter-ling, with his wife’s dower duly renounced, and approved by appellants’ attorney, and tendering it to G. N. Gilbert, the said Gilbert refused to accept the deed, stating that it was then too late as the matter was then in court. Gilbert denied any such agreement on his part, but said he told Goraine that he would give him what it would cost for the foreclosure if he would procure the deed properly executed by his brothers. He futher testified that at some time during the negotiations for the reconveyance of the land, he had offered to give Goraine $1,500.00 for the home he had built on this land, or would convey the land on which the house had been built (presumably one acre of the land) to Goraine if he would pay him $1,000.00; that Goraine didn’t pay him $1,000.00, and he didn’t offer to pay Goraine $1,500.00, and refused to accept the deed. So far as the record shows, the status of the foreclosure was unchanged from the time appellants’ attorney prepared the deed and it was executed by Geland Richard Easterling in said attorney’s office, and when Goraine returned from Washington, D. C., with the signature thereon of James M. Easterling.

*272 The appellants proceeded with the foreclosure proceeding resulting in a decree of foreclosure and order for sale of the land on December 5, 1949. After the order for sale of the premises, and pending the advertisement of the sale, the residence which Loraine Easterling had built on the south-west corner of this tract of land was moved therefrom onto the adjoining lands of Guy Wilhelm.

L. N. Gilbert, on behalf of the appellants made an affidavit that this residence or building had been moved off the lands of the appellants by Loraine Easterling and his two brothers, the defendants in the foreclosure action. Based on this affidavit Honorable J. Woodrow Lewis, Judge of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, on December 3, 1949, issued a rule to show cause in the foreclosure proceeding, directed to the defendants therein and to Loraine Easterling and Guy Wilhelm returnable before him on December 10, 1949, why they should not be required to replace said building on said premises; and postponed the sale of the property until salesclay in January, 1950.

The return of the Easterling brothers and Wilhelm is not included in the record, but we must assume from the proceedings which followsd, and the order of Judge Lewis that the return did not raise the issue that even the long arm of a Court of Equity could not force them to move this house from the Wilhelm land back onto the land from whence it was moved.

Upon the filing of the Return to the Rule to Show Cause, Judge Lewis referred the case to Honorable E. W. Fountain, Judge of Probate for Darlington County, for the purpose of taking the testimony on the issues raised by the Rule and the Return. It is from the testimony so taken, and other statements in the record, that we have gleaned the facts here-inbefore set out.

There is not one word in the testimony taken before the Referee, Mr. Fountain, indicating who moved the house from the land on which it was first built, other than that it ap *273

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.E.2d 595, 217 S.C. 267, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-easterling-sc-1950.