McAfee v. McAfee

5 S.E. 480, 28 S.C. 188, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 480 (McAfee v. McAfee) 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
McAfee v. McAfee, 5 S.E. 480, 28 S.C. 188, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 38 (S.C. 1888).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McIver.

On the 15th day of May, 1880, John. T. M. McAfee, who is the intestate of the defendant, John C. McAfee, executed a mortgage to the plaintiff on a tract of land containing 565 acres, to secure the payment of eleven hundred and twenty-eight 58-100 dollars, alleged to be due for money [190]*190borrowed at sundry times by the intestate from his wife, the plaintiff herein. On October 1, 1880, a portion of the mortgaged premises was sold and conveyed by the mortgagor to one C. J. Moore, leaving about 400 acres subject to the lien of the mortgage, the plaintiff having on the same day released her lien, without consideration, on the portion so sold. On May 13, 1882, this action was commenced for the foreclosure of said mortgage, and the appellant, Mobley, who was subsequently made a party by the order of the court permitting him to come in and defend the action,1 set up the following defences: 1st. That the mortgage was pretensive and without valid consideration. 2nd. That it was made with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the mortgagor. 3rd. That the plaintiff concurred in such intent. 4th. That if there ever was any valid consideration for the mortgage, it has been paid in full. 5th. That the appellant is now’ the legal owner of the premises, and in possession thereof.

The issues of law and fact were referred to a referee, who found as matter of fact that the consideration of the mortgage was of a twofold character: 1st. A claim held by Dr. McLurkin against the mortgagor, which had been purchased by the mortgagee. 2nd. Money derived from the personal services of the plaintiff, in making clothes for third persons, and from the sale of butter, made by her during coverture, with the consent of her husband, from cows belonging to him; that the debt to Dr. McLurkin consisted of a due bill and an unitemized account for medical services, amounting on the day when the plaintiff settled it — the day before the mortgage was executed — to the sum of $169.95; that the plaintiff settled 2 with Dr. McLurkin by giving her individual note for a sum less than the debt, which note has never been paid; that the purchase money of the land sold to C. J. Moore was applied to the satisfaction of a judgment in favor of Biggers Mobley against the mortgagor, entered in 1867, and to the satisfaction of a mortgage on the same land given to the Messrs. Hemp-hill on May 7, 1880, leaving a small balance which was applied to the payment of advances made by the defendant, John O. [191]*191McAfee, to the mortgagor, his father, for supplies for the family and the plantation that year; that plaintiff and intestate were married in 1856, and at that time her whole estate consisted of some sixty or seventy dollars, and that her name first appears on the tax books as a taxpayer in 1882 for $585 worth of personal property, and in 1883 for $600; that in 1860 John T. M. McAfee was appointed administrator of the estate of Thomas Wright, and the appellant, Mobley, was one of the sureties on his administration bond, the other surety having died many years since intestate and insolvent, and that in July, 1879, proceedings were instituted by the distributees of Wright against John T. M. McAfee, as administrator, which culminated in a final decree against him, in favor of the distributees, for the sum of $2,168.72, on April 25, 1882; that on April 27, 1882, the land embraced in the mortgage was levied on by the sheriff under said judgment or decree, and on June 5, 1882, the same was sold and bid off by the appellant, Mobley, for the sum of $700, who now holds sheriff’s titles for the same; that the parties entitled to the benefit of said decree, assigned their interest therein to the appellant, most of them before the sale made by the sheriff, and that since said sale John T. M. McAfee had no other property subject to levy and sale.

Upon these facts, the referee found as matters of law: 1st. That the earnings of a wife derived from her personal services belonged to her husband, and, hence, that the money derived from such services, which was claimed to have been borrowed by the husband from the wife, not being a valid debt, constituted no valid consideration for the mortgage, and that the arrangement between the husband and wife as to the money, made by her in the manner above stated, amounted, at most, only to a gift, which could not be made to the prejudice of the husband’s creditors. 2nd. That as to so much of the consideration as rested upon the satisfaction of the debt to Dr. McLurkin, it could not be sustained, because, at that time, all but seventeen dollars of the debt was barred by the statute of limitations, and this, together with other circumstances mentioned in the report of the referee, satisfied him that the arrangement was not in good faith, and, as against [192]*192the distributees of Wright and their assignee, Mobley, it cannot constitute a valid consideration for the mortgage.

To this report both parties filed exceptions, and the case was heard by Judge Norton upon such report and exceptions, who overruled the referee’s report as to the McLurkin debt, holding that so much of the consideration of the mortgage as rested upon that debt was good and valid. He also held that so much of the plaintiff’s claim as arose from her personal services, except where the money received for such services had gone into the possession of her husband prior to the adoption of the constitution of 1868, was a good and valid debt due by her husband to her, and, therefore, a valid consideration for the mortgage; but that so much of her claim “as arose from the property, to wit, the cows belonging to John T. M. McAfee, as distinguished from plaintiff’s services, in using them, is not a valid and binding claim,” and, therefore, constitutes no valid consideration for the mortgage. He, therefore. recommitted the report to the referee, with instructions to inquire and report the amount due on the mortgage under his rulings above. From this decree both parties appeal upon the several grounds set out in the record, which we deem it unnecessary to repeat here.

It will be observed, that, in fact, there has not yet been any final judgment rendered in the case, but as no question has been raised either in the record or in the argument here in respect to this, we will not volunteer to do so, inasmuch as, under the view which we take of the case, much unnecessary and troublesome inquiry will be avoided.

Both the referee and the Circuit Judge seem to have passed without consideration the fact that the plaintiff had released the lien of her mortgage on that portion of the mortgaged premises sold to O. J. Moore by the mortgagor, which was relied on by appellant as a fraud upon the creditors of the mortgagor and an additional badge of bad faith in the execution of this mortgage; and this is made the subject of complaint by the appellant, both in his exception to the referee’s report and in his grounds of appeal. Inasmuch, however, as much the larger portion of the purchase money received from Moore appears from the testimony to have been applied to the satisfaction of liens antecedent to the [193]*193plaintiff’s mortgage, leaving only a small balance, -which was applied to the payment of advances made during that year for the support of the family and plantation, we do not think it can have any weight in the present inquiry. The real questions raised by the appeal are : 1st. As to the McLurkin debt. 2nd. As to the earnings of the wife derived from her personal services.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 480, 28 S.C. 188, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcafee-v-mcafee-sc-1888.