Greenwood Cotton Mill v. Pace

174 S.E. 473, 172 S.C. 531, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 16, 1934
Docket13854
StatusPublished

This text of 174 S.E. 473 (Greenwood Cotton Mill v. Pace) 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
Greenwood Cotton Mill v. Pace, 174 S.E. 473, 172 S.C. 531, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 103 (S.C. 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

The appellant brought its action in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County to have the Court declare a judgment in its favor, to the effect that the lien of a judgment which it had obtained against American Land & Investment Company should have priority over the lien of a mortgage from American Land & Investment Company to its co-respond.eñt, J. ,L. Pace.

.The. pleadings are not included in the transcript of record ■and thé statement for appeal is meager in details. But we gather from it, the decree of the Circuit Judge and the testimony, the following understanding of the issues involved:

J. L. Pace and the American Land & Investment Company, which we shall call the Bank, answered the complaint. J.' B. Eskew is in .default and has no further interest in the case.

In June, 1929, the appellant,- which we shall call the'Mill, obtained a'judgment against the- Bank in the Court of' Common Pleas for Pickens County, which was transcripted to *533 the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County, and entered in the clerk’s office there January 16, 1930. The basis of the judgment was a debt contracted in 1926. J. L. Pace had purchased from the American Bank & Trust Company, the predecessor of the American Land & Investment Company, certain notes and mortgages, among which was a note and mortgage given by. T. A. Honour in the sum of $4,-500.00. The Bank gave to Pace a trust receipt by which it stipulated that it held in trust for the account and subject to the order of J. L. Pace or of Mrs. Caroline P. Pace all of the notes and mortgages therein listed, which included the T. A. Honour note and mortgage, and it contained the further stipulation binding the Bank to repurchase the papers at the sale price plus interest. The Bank retained the papers in its possession; collected the interest from year to year which was turned over to Pace. The Honour papers are dated February 11, 1923. Honour became in default in the payment of interest, and in August, 1929, the Bank instituted foreclosure proceedings in its own name. At the sale the Bank bid in the property at $100.00, although the mortgage debt then amounted to $4,500.00 with more than two years’ interest added. The property was estimated to be worth more than $6,000.00. The Master for Greenville County, who made the sale, executed .and delivered to. the American Land & Investment Company a deed for the land thus sold under foreclosure, and on the same day the Bank made to J. L. Pace a mortgage of this land in the sum of $4,500.00. It appears that the deed and mortgage were delivered to the Register of Mesne Conveyance on January Hth. '

Plaintiff’s contention is that the American Land & Investment Company purchased the mortgaged land at the foreclosure sale, took deed to itself, and made its .mortgage to Pace. That this wrought a novation of the old Honour mortgage which the Bank had' sold to Pace and extinguished the lien of the'Honour mortgage. That the transcrip't 'of its judgment from Pickens County ’to .Greenville County. :was *534 made and entered January 16, 1930, and the deed to the Bank and its mortgage to Pace were made the same day (January 16, 1930), but not delivered for record till January 17, 1930, and the deed delivered to the Bank some days later. Hence, as the deed did not vest the title in the Bank until its delivery, the lien of plaintiff’s judgment took priority over that of Pace’s mortgage.

Defendant’s contention is that the trust relation between J. B. Pace and the Bank was not affected by the proceedings in foreclosure and sale thereunder, but created a lien upon the premises which was not divested by the claims of prior creditors.

The case was heard by Judge Oxner on the testimony taken by a special referee. In his decree he held that under the doctrine of equitable trusts, the lands in the hands of the Bank are charged with a lien in favor of J. B. Pace for the full amount of the Honour mortgage which the Bank had sold to him. He held further that Pace’s rights may be maintained on the ground that his mortgage is a purchase-money mortgage.

From this decree the plaintiff appeals upon fourteen exceptions. But the appeal turns upon the determination of the question whether Pace has an equitable lien upon the lands in the hands of the Bank.

We concur with the Circuit Judge in his conclusion that Pace has a lien on the land prior to that of appellant.

There can be no dispute of the fact that when the Bank sold to Pace certain securities, including the Honour note and mortgage, and gave him the receipt, which is in evidence, there was established a relation of trust between them by which the Bank was obligated to protect the interests of the cestui que trust. It guaranteed to him the payment of this note and mortgage. As trustee of this express trust the Bank was authorized by Section 399 of the Code of Civil Procedure 1932 to bring the action for foreclosure in its name. That section is in these words: “An *535 executor or administrator, a trustee of an express trust, or a person expressly authorized by statute, may sue, without joining with him the person for whose benefit the action is prosecuted. A trustee of an express trust, within the meaning of this section, shall be construed to include a person with whom, or in whose name, a contract is made for the benefit of another.”

It is argued for appellant that the internal evidence of the transaction and the testimony in the record show that the Bank bought the land for itself, at the foreclosure sale, took title to itself and secured Pace by giving him its mortgage. We think, on the contrary, that the analysis of the internal evidence and the testimony in the record shows that the Bank knew that Pace’s lien attached to the land in its hands. It certainly did not understand that it could buy this land, worth some $6,500.00, for the pitiful sum of $100.00, and pay off Pace by giving him a mortgage for $4,500.00 in satisfaction of a debt which exceeded the sum of $5,100.00. The analysis of the whole transaction shows that it was intended to protect Pace in the safety of his position as the holder of a mortgage which had been sold to him by the Bank, and which the Bank held in trust for him, and the collection of which, with its accumulation of interest, the Bank had guaranteed. There was no merger of the equitable lien of Pace’s mortgage, the Hon-our mortgage, because there was no intention to merge. It is not reasonable to suppose that Pace would have merged his equitable rights in the mortgaged property in consideration of a mortgage for a less amount than was due him. It is true he said he did not want the land, but that is far from saying that he was relinquishing his lien thereon and his guaranty by the Bank. This contention is aptly disposed of by the opinion of this Court in the case of McCraney v. Morris, 170 S. C., 250, 170 S. E., 276, 279, which is cited in the circuit decree. Mrs. McCraney held a mortgage against the lands of Mrs. Edna Morris, which was past due *536 and upon which foreclosure was threatened. But instead, it .was agreed that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.E. 473, 172 S.C. 531, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-cotton-mill-v-pace-sc-1934.