Mills v. Carrier

9 S.E. 350, 30 S.C. 617, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 23, 1889
DocketNo. 2399
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 350 (Mills v. Carrier) 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
Mills v. Carrier, 9 S.E. 350, 30 S.C. 617, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 147 (S.C. 1889).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chibe Justice Simpson,

[617]*617Plaintiff sued- defendant for the foreclosure of two mortgages of land, held by plaintiff’s intestate. Defendant admitted the mortgage debts, but set up as payment and counter-claims several demands held by him against intestate, some of which arose out of a partnership which had existed between defendant and plaintiff’s intestate. Held,

1. That an unsettled partnership account in favor of defendant may be set up as a counter-claim against an individual debt sued on by plaintiff, when properly pleaded.

2. It was sufficiently pleaded here, as the defendant substantially averred the existence of the unsettled transactions, asked for an accounting, and alleged that upon such accounting a balance would be found to be due to him from plaintiff.

3. Defendant built a house for intestate about the same time that intestate acquired by assignment the ownership of the two mortgages. Defendant was paid in part by a transfer of intestate’s interest in certain partnership chattels, leaving a balance due to him. Seven years afterwards, intestate died, and his administrator brought this action. This court, overruling the Circuit Judge (Witherspoon), agreed with the referee that the parties intended this balance to be applied as a payment or set-off on the mortgage debt, and, moreover, held, that such balance was not barred by the statute of limitations, as there were mutual dealings and accounts between the parties, involving several matters, and this action was commenced within six years from the date of the last item in these mutual accounts.

[618]*618Judgment modified.

In this case a petition for rehearing was filed by plaintiff, alleging that two items of defendant’s account were allowed when there was no testimony whatever to sustain them, and that the amount found due to defendant should be decreed to be subject to a full settlement of the partnership accounts between defendant and plaintiff’s intestate. This court dismissed the petition,, holding that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the two items referred to; and, as to the second point, that there was nothing in the exceptions which would authorize such a decree. Petition dismissed per curiam (No. 2428), April 23, 1889,

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Related

Few v. Few
122 S.E.2d 829 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 350, 30 S.C. 617, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-carrier-sc-1889.