Hannon v. Mechanics Building & Loan Ass'n

180 S.E. 873, 177 S.C. 153, 100 A.L.R. 928, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 12, 1935
Docket14089
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 S.E. 873 (Hannon v. Mechanics Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Hannon v. Mechanics Building & Loan Ass'n, 180 S.E. 873, 177 S.C. 153, 100 A.L.R. 928, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 26 (S.C. 1935).

Opinion

*156 The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. A. E. Gaston, Acting Associate Justice.

On the 20th .of December, 1934, Judge Sease granted a decree for the sale by the receivers of J. N. Cudd of certain real estate belonging to the estate of J. N. Cudd. The suit was begun by a petition in behalf of the co-receivers of the estate of J. N. Cudd, which set forth in detail the matters and facts upon which the judgment of the Court was sought for leave to sell and convey the real estate to T. P. Sims for the sum of $60,500.00 upon the terms of his offer of purchase. Upon this petition a rule was issued whereby the parties named as respondents herein were ordered to show cause why the Co-receivers should not be authorized to effect the proposed settlement, and convey the real estate. A consent order of reference was taken referring the matter to the master to take the testimony and to report thereon. No return to the rule or other pleadings apparently were served or filed, and it appears that J. N. Cudd was not a party against whom the rule to show cause was directed. He was not a party to the proceeding, and did not apply to the Court for leave to intervene, or to be allowed to appear.

The decree of Judge Sease, among other things, shows that the master’s report was filed on the 3rd of December, 1934. Thereafter, the attorneys for J. N. Cudd, the attorneys for J. W. Boyd as receiver for J. J. Cudd, and the attorneys for J. J. Cudd, served and filed exceptions to the report of the master. In the meanwhile the attorney for the petitioners, who are the co-receivers of J. N. Cudd, served notice that he would move for a decree in this case. At the hearing Mr. Eugene S. Blease, as attorney for J. J. Cudd, stated that if the sale of this property were held open for a period of sixty days, that he would withdraw all of his exceptions to the master’s report. Mr. A. E. Tinsley, representing J. W. Boyd, as receiver, stated the same thing. The report was confirmed and all exceptions overruled.

*157 After a careful consideration of the record herein on appeal, we find that the salient facts are fairly and succinctly stated in the brief of appellant. This statement is adopted and shows that on the 8th day of December, 1930, the appellant, J. N. Cudd, who is now in receivership, executed and delivered his promissory note by which he promised to pay to T. P. Sims, two years thereafter, the sum of $53,616.24 with interest from December 10, 1930, at 8 per cent., payable annually. The maker’s son, J. J. Cudd, who is also in receivership, indorsed the note before delivery.

To secure the payment of the note, J. N. Cudd simultaneously conveyed, by way of mortgage, to T. P. Sims three pieces of real estate, to wit: (1) An undivided one-half interest in a business lot on the corner of East Main and Dunbar streets in the City of Spartanburg, on which are located two or three wood and tin buildings and a filling station; (2) a lot fronting 22 feet on East Main street in the City of Spartanburg on which is located a building, with a restaurant occupying the ground floor (the first mortgage of approximately $16,500.00 on this property is held by Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company) ; and (3) a 75-acre farm in Spartanburg County. The Sims mortgage is a first mortgage lien on the half interest in the corner lot first above described and on the 75-acre farm.

Unpaid taxes and paving assessments charged against the three pieces of property amount to approximately $8,686.79. The two pieces of business property are rented for $3,857.50 a year, and the farm appears not to be rented at the present time. There has been paid on the Cudd note held by T. P. Sims the sum of $2,040.00, leaving unpaid thereon the sum of approximately $68,733.44, including interest.

The mortgagee, T. P. Sims, who has since died, made an offer to purchase the three pieces of real estate for a total purchase price of $60,500.00, from which he proposed to deduct and pay all taxes and paving assessments, the mortgage held by Provident Mutual Insurance Com *158 pany, the commission of J. N. Cudd’s receivers, and the fee for the receiver’s attorneys. It is proposed to credit the remainder of the purchase price on the Sims note and to prove the balance of the note as a general claim against the estate of J. N. Cudd.

The Circuit Judge, affirming the master’s report, ordered the receivers of J. N. Cudd, after advertising six weeks in the Spartanburg Herald, to accept bids up to March 1, 1935, with upset prices equal in amount to the sum offered by T. P. Sims fixed, and, in case of no higher bids, to accept the Sims offer. From this decree, J. N. Cudd has appealed to the Supreme Court.

Notice was served by the attorney for the receivers and duly filed of a motion before this Court to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that it is frivolous, without merit, intended solely for delay, and because J. N. Cudd is not a party to this suit.

Appellant makes nine exceptions which are argued as involving five questions.

The first two questions raised are that the Court below erred in ordering a sale of the premises at the present time at a fixed upset price for cash.

Manifestly no issue as to the propriety, wisdom, or necessity of placing the property of J. N. Cudd in the hands of receivers can arise in this case, but all such questions have been finally adjudicated and settled, so that no dispute can now arise in regard to the fact that the Court after mature deliberation has taken charge of the real estate and other property of J. N. Cudd, to be handled by the receivers and disposed of as the Court shall direct for the benefit of all creditors, who have a paramount interest in the assets of an insolvent person, for the protection of the lien creditors, and for the best interest of the owner of the property, who by reason of financial misfortune finds himself unable to pay his debts and forced into receivership. The appellant has had his day in Court in re *159 spect to these matters and consented to the order for receivership which was granted on motion of certain of his creditors and is now bound by such proceedings. Penn Mutal Life Insurance Co. v. Cudd, 172 S. C., 88, 172 S. E., 787.

3. A sale of receivership property by the receiver, under an order of Court, is a judicial sale. The Court has the right and power to determine the terms and conditions of the sale in advance and to fix the minimum price. Tardy’s Smith on Receivers, Vol. 11, page 1781, § 640; Hewitt v. Walters, 21 Idaho, 1, 119 P., 705, Ann. Cas., 1913-C, page 35.

The Courts of this State have uniformly exercised the power to order that a receiver, duly appointed, shall sell the real estate and other property of the person or corporation whose assets are in the hands of receivers, in order to distribute the proceeds among creditors, stockholders, and other parties interested, and to liquidate and wind up the affairs of such insolvent person or corporation.

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Related

People v. Riverside University
35 Cal. App. 3d 572 (California Court of Appeal, 1973)
Utley v. S. W. Wilson & Sons, Inc.
32 S.E.2d 654 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1944)
Claffy v. Mechanics Building & Loan Ass'n
15 S.E.2d 142 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1941)
Bates v. Evans
284 N.W. 385 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Cudd v. Hannon
198 S.E. 17 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.E. 873, 177 S.C. 153, 100 A.L.R. 928, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannon-v-mechanics-building-loan-assn-sc-1935.