McKnight v. Gordon

34 S.C. Eq. 222
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 34 S.C. Eq. 222 (McKnight v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKnight v. Gordon, 34 S.C. Eq. 222 (S.C. Ct. App. 1867).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Inglis, A. J..

The appeal in this case renews the question made on the circuit, as to the legal operation and effect of the deed of May 20th, 1854, from Jane J. McKnight to the present appellant. Is that deed “ a mortgage or instrument of writing, in the nature of a mortgage,” as tbe circuit decree affirms, or is it “an absolute transfer of title, with a condition subsequent which never arose,” as is contended in the first ground of appeal ? The bill alleges that “ it was understood and intended, at the time of its execution, to be an absolute sale,” and the chattels thereby conveyed were then delivered into the plaintiff's possession ; that “the clause of defeasance was added only for the purpose of enabling the grantor, at some future time, if able and desiring so to do, by re-payment of what the plaintiff should pay for her, to reclaim the property.”

The terms of this deed, and the circumstances which induced and followed its execution, taken alone, very clearly evince that the transaction, thereby consummated and evidenced, was intended by the parties to be, and is in fact, only a mortgage, and was not a sale, transferring finally and absolutely the property in the chattels, which are the subject thereof, to the present plaintiff, or even one qualified [229]*229by a limitation upon an event wbicb was to determine it, or by an agreement for leave to tbe vendor to repurchase.

The purpose is declared in terms to be, “ for the full and better securing "William Gr. McKnight” (i: e. tbe present plaintiff) “ from all liability for wbicb be may become indebted as my” (i. e. Jane J. McKnight’s) “ security on any notes,” &c., and tbe estate in tbe chattels wbicb is conveyed to him for this purpose is thus described: “to have and to hold, &c., as bis own right and title, until' be shall become relieved from all indebtedness or obligation incurred as security as aforesaid.” Thus tbe purpose avowed is, to indemnify and save harmless the plaintiff from and against liabilities incurred as tbe grantor’s surety, and be is accordingly to bold only while such liabilities and their consequences endure. It would be difficult to impress upon tbe face of an instrument, more clearly than is done in these words, “the character of a security,” or more plainly to evince, by language, that tbe transaction between tbe parties was a mere loan of tbe plaintiff’s credit, and security for repayment, or protection against consequent loss; and not a purchase and conveyance of tbe maker’s title and estate. To this view tbe circumstances of the transaction exactly conform. There is no payment of a price, or even transfer to and assumption by tbe plaintiff) of the grantor’s liability to third persons, so as to relieve and discharge tbe latter, as tbe consideration for tbe conveyance. There is an undertaking for tbe performance of the grantor’s engagements, entered into or contemplated, but for this performance the grantor continues, as before, equally with tbe plaintiff, and as between themselves, primarily liable. Tbe relation of debtor and creditor, or rather principal and surety, bad been constituted tbe day before, was then subsisting, and afterwards continued. It is tbe fair result of the evidence, that there was no cotemporaneous delivery in fact of tbe chattel, as tbe third ground' of appeal assumes. [230]*230The plaintiff, William Gr. McKnight, was then living separately from Ms mother, Jane J. McKnight. The negro Bill, one of those conveyed, was in the possession of A. Isaac McKnight, under a contract of hiring for the year, and so remained until the completion of the term of hiring. It does not appear that the security fox his hire, if any, or the right to receive it, was ever transferred to the plaintiff. The other negro, James, was then learning his trade, in the ■ blacksmith shop of his mistress, the grantor in the deed, and so continued. In the spring of 1855 Jane J. McKnight, the grantor, and not William Gr. McKnight, the grantee and present plaintiff, in the exercise of the right of ownership, let the negro Bill, on hire, to the witness, Bradley, to work as a cai’penter, and the other negro, James, accompanied Mm, and they continued in the possession of this bailee of the grantor until seized by the Sheriff She, not the plains tiff, undertook to supply these negroes with food during the engagement with Bradley, and she stipulated for the plaintiff’s oversight of them. There is not wanting some testimony looking the contrary way, but altogether the safest and most satisfactory conclusion from the whole is, that the possession was not and was not intended to be changed. Against this import of the terms of the deed, and the circumstances of its execution, there is no evidence aliunde to support the allegation of an intention other than these evince. If there were, it would avail little. If the character of a security is once impressed on the conveyance, it is a rule never departed from that no cotemporaneous stipulation can clog the right of redemption, or entitle the creditor to more than repayment of his principal, interest and costs. This rule is expressed in the maxim, ' Once a mortgage, always a mortgage,’ and stipulations repugnant to this maxim have often been set aside. Such, for example, are agreements for entitling the mortgagee, after default, to purchase, at a specific. sum.” Adam’s [231]*231Eq. 112. It is the judgment of this Court, that the deed, of May 20th, 1854, was intended to be, and is a mortgage, or, at least, it is an instrument of writing in the nature of a mortgage,” and that, in this particular, therefore, there is no such error in the circuit decree as the appellant in his first and third grounds assigns.

This mortgage has never been recorded. Eighteen months after its execution, the defendant, Gordon, purchased the negro James, one of the two conveyed therein, for valuable consideration, as the property of the mortgagor, Jane J. McKnight, at a sale by the Sheriff, under execution against her, and under this purchase took possession. And the precise issue made by the residue of the present controversy is, Can he maintain this possession, and the title acquired by his purchase, against the plaintiff’s prior mortgage and discharged from its lien ? The Act of 1843 — “ To amend the law in relation to recording mortgages, ” &c., sec. 2— provides, that no “mortgage, or other instrument of writing in the nature of a mortgage, of personal property, shall be valid, so as to affect the rights of subsequent creditors or purchasers for valuable consideration, without notice, unless the same shall be recorded, &c., within sixty days from the execution thereof.” 11 Stat. 256. The defendant claims to be a “ purchaser ” within the protection of this statute.

Eecording is not an element in the due execution of a mortgage, and therefore is not essential to its validity. Under the general law regulating the operation and effect of mortgages, an instrument of this kind, though unrecorded, must necessarily take precedence of the lien of a subsequent execution or of ^subsequent sale, whether made by the Sheriff under such execution, or immediately by the mortgagor himself. Eor having divested himself, for the time, at least, of the estate in the chattel, &c., put in pledge by the mortgage, he of course has no power in law [232]

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.C. Eq. 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcknight-v-gordon-scctapp-1867.