Henegan v. Drake

143 S.E. 549, 146 S.C. 157, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 25, 1928
Docket12360
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 S.E. 549 (Henegan v. Drake) 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
Henegan v. Drake, 143 S.E. 549, 146 S.C. 157, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 105 (S.C. 1928).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This is .an action instituted August 3, 1923, by certain heirs at law of one Sallie Henegan, deceased, to foreclose a mortgage executed by Jesse P. Henegan, now deceased, to his mother, Elizabeth E. Henegan, dated April 5, 1912, due one year after date, for $4,000.

The plaintiffs claim that while the mortgage was executed to Elizabeth E. Henegan, it was intended for the benefit of Sallie Henegan, and that at her death her interest in it (the *159 whole) devolved, upon them and Jesse P. Henegan as her heirs at law. Sundry lien creditors, by mortgage and judgment, of Jesse P. Henegan, have been made parties to the foreclosure proceeding, and have set up their respective liens as will be developed later.

There is no controversy as to the amount and priority, over all other liens, of the mortgage of the Union Central Life Insurance Company. The amount due thereon, as of the date of the referee’s report (which appears in the record without a date) is $3,733.34, plus 5 per cent, attorney’s fees. It is conceded to be the first lien upon the property. The other liens, set up in the order of priority, are as follows:

(2) Bond and mortgage of Jesse P. Henegan to Elizabeth E. Henegan, $4,000, dated April 5, 1912, due one year after date, with interest from maturity at 7 per cent., upon which there appears to be a credit as of November 7, 1919, of $2,100.

(3) Note and mortgage of Jesse P. Henegan to W. R. Drake, $2,000, dated November 7, 1919, due January 1, .1924, with interest from November 1, 1919, at 8 per cent, and attorney’s fees.

(4) Note and mortgage of Jesse P. Henegan to Planters’ National Bank, $2,500, dated April 4, 1921, due November 1, 1921, with interest from maturity at 8 per cent, and attorney’s fees. Credits: November 22, 1921, $298.59; December 7, 1921, $136.62. Assigned to W. R. Drake.

(5) Judgment of E. S. Royster Company against Jesse P. Henegan, $1,694.92, entered August 4, 1921.

(6) Note and mortgage of Jesse P. Henegan to People’s National Bank. (No details given in the record.)

(7) Judgment of Enterprise Hardware Company against Jesse P. Henegan. (No details given in the record.)

(8) Southern Life & Trust Company. (No details given in the record.)

The real controversy in the case arises in connection with the bond and mortgage of Jesse P. Henegan to Elizabeth E. *160 Henegan, $4,000, dated April 5, 1912, due one year after date. Naturally, it is to the interest of the holders of liens junior to that mortgage to reduce the amount due upon it as much as possible. This controversy involves most unusual and complicated circumstances, which we shall endeavor to make clear.

It appears that one Elizabeth E. Henegan, the mother of Jesse P. Henegan,, Sallie Henegan, James Henegan, John Henegan, and Annie Covington, was the owner of the tract of land in question, and in 1910 executed a will, in which she devised and bequeathed her entire estate to two of her children, Jesse P. Henegan and Sallie Henegan, in equal shares; she had no other property than the tract of land, and had already provided for her other children. She died in 1915 without having made any change in her will and owing no debts.

In the meantime, in 1912, the son, Jesse P. Henegan, who doubtless had been informed of the provisions of the will in favor of himself and his sister Sallie, attempted to negotiaate a loan of $3,500 from the Union Central Life Insurance Company. He had nothing but his expectant interest in the tract of land under the will of his mother to offer as security for the proposed loan. In order therefore to consummate the loan, it was necessary that the title to the tract of land be vested in him. Accordingly on April 5, 1912, the mother, Elizabeth E. Henegan, conveyed the entire tract to Jesse P. Henegan. At the time of the conveyance to Jesse, and as a part of that transaction, Jesse gave to his mother his bond for $4,000, due 12 months after date, and secured it by a mortgage upon the land. Obviously to prevent this mortgage from constituting an obstruction to the negotiations for a loan from the insurance company, this clause was inserted:

“This mortgage will be second in rank on these premises, one for the puchase price having priority over1, this, of which notice is hereby given.”

*161 It seems to be assumed on all sides that the mortgage referred to as “one for the purchase price” was the mortgage which Jesse P. Henegan expected to give to the insurance company to secure the loan of $3,500. At any rate it is not disputed that the Insurance Company’s mortgage is the first lien upon the property; perhaps for the reason also that it was recorded on May 6, 1912, within proper time after its execution and delivery, while the $4,000 mortgage, dated April 5, 1912, was not recorded until the following December.

The negotiations for a loan from the Insurance Company were closed by the execution and delivery of a note by Jesse P. Henegan, for $3,500, dated May 2, 1912, secured by a mortgage of the premises.

Elizabeth E. Henegan died about June, 1915, in North Carolina, and her will was probated there. No executor qualified, and no letters of administration have ever been issued in that State or in this. Sallie Henegan died December 10, 1919, intestate, never having married, owning no other property than her interest in the $4,000 mortgage, owing no debts, and leaving as her heirs at law the plaintiffs who are her brother, James C. and John H. Henegan, and the two Covington children of a deceased sister, Annie Covington. No administration has been taken out upon her (Sallie Henegan’s) estate.

The case has a very irregular presentation in two aspects: Elizabeth E. Henegan died leaving a will which was probated in North Carolina; no letters were issued there and no ancillary administration has been taken out in this State. Sallie Henegan died intestate; no administration has been taken out on her estate. But as all parties interested are before the Court and it appears that there are no debts against either estate, the irregularities perhaps may be disregarded under authority of the cases of Grant v. Poyas, 62 S. C., 426; 40 S. E., 891. Lanter v. Ins. Co., 114 S. C., 536; 104 S. E., 193. 11 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 742, 985.

*162 The contention of the plaintiffs is that the $4,000 mortgage was the property of Sallie Henegan, and that at her death it was devolved upon them and Jesse P. Henegan, a fourth part to- each, Jesse, James, John, and the two children of Annie Covington, deceased; that the interest of Jesse merged in his title to the land; and that the remaining three-fourths of the mortgage belongs to the other three interests. The opposing contention is that Sallie Henegan, prior to the death of Elizabeth E.

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Related

Lerner v. Bluestein
178 S.E. 265 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.E. 549, 146 S.C. 157, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henegan-v-drake-sc-1928.