Mitchell v. Bogan

45 S.C.L. 686
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 S.C.L. 686 (Mitchell v. Bogan) 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
Mitchell v. Bogan, 45 S.C.L. 686 (S.C. Ct. App. 1858).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

WITHERS, J.

In Durand vs. Isaacs, 4 McC. 54, an application was made to the Court of Law to foreclose a mortgage of real estate where the • mortgagor was out of possession, but his alienee (it is presumed) was in possession. The jurisdiction of the Court was denied, upon the terms of the Act of 1791. That Act changed the theory of law (which, upon condition broken, made the mortgagee the owner of the.land,) in the case when the mortgagor was in possession; in which case, in order to avoid delay and expense in foreclosing the [689]*689mortgage, and. for tbe purpose of barring tbe equity of redemption, a jurisdiction (when other circumstances mentioned concurred) was given to tbe “Judges of tbe Court of Common Pleas,” which our practice has interpreted to be any one of such Judges, to cause tbe mortgaged premises to be sold to pay tbe debt secured. The second section enacted, that, though the condition of defeasance had been broken, the mortgagor should not bring any possessory action, but the mortgagor should still be deemed the owner of the land, and the mortgagee should be enabled to recover satisfaction of his debt, in the manner and under the circumstances before prescribed, by the agency of the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas: “ Provided (says the Act) always, that nothing herein contained shall extend to any suit or action now pending, or when the mortgagor shall be out of possession, nor to contravene in any way the ordinance entitled ‘An ordinance to encourage subjects of foreign States to lend money at interest on real estates within this Statenor to deprive any person of any right which he, she, or they may have at the time of passing this Act.”

The question in the case of Durand vs. Isaacs was, whether the proviso recited had relation, by the words, “herein contained,” to.the whole Act, or only to the second section, which contained it; and it was adjudged that it had relation to the whole Act. The consequence necessarily followed, that where the mortgagor was out of possession of the mortgaged premises, the parties were left under the rule of the common law, which rule made the mortgagee the owner of the land upon condition broken. This view of the Act of 1791 (5 Stat. 169) was adopted and reaffirmed by the case of Stoney and Shultz, 1 Hill Ch. 465. This explicit exposition of the proper construction of the statute law leaves no other conclusion than that the plaintiff in this case is not one who is forbidden to bring a possessory action by the statute of 1791, but is one who at common law was clothed with the [690]*690title to’the land in question, and must have the right inseparable from such title to maintain this action. This incidental right cannot be affected by that privilege" which the Court of Equity might offer to a mortgagor, or other person clothed with his equity in that behalf, to' extinguish the mortgage, even after condition broken, by paying all that is due to the mortgagee. The position for a nonsuit, therefore, is ill conceived, that the mortgagee cannot maintain this action until he has regularly foreclosed the right to redeem. Whether the plaintiff could lawfully buy the land at a sale made by virtue of a power to sell stipulated in the mortgage, which is the subject of the third ground for a new trial, need not be discussed; for the plaintiff was entitled to his action independent of any sale, by force of the legal operation of the mortgage itself.

This power to sell real estate, conferred by the mortgagor upon the mortgagee, is not familiar in our observation, but it is sometimes inserted in conveyances by way of mortgage of land. Nor is it liable to any legal objection. It is now usual, in England, says Mr. Coote, in his treatise on the law of mortgage, and it seems to be common enough in various of the States of the Union. Notwithstanding Lord Eldon once doubted the validity of such a power, it was exerted in his time, as may be seen in the case of Clay vs. Sharpe, cited in a note, 18 Ves. Jr. 846. It seems to have been adopted to serve the ends of both parties to the mortgage, accompanied sometimes with qualifications that look to investment of the surplus, or disposition of it, for the benefit of the mortgagor, and serves to avoid formidable costs of foreclosure in equity, and accumulation of interest by delay. Enough upon this subject may be seen by consulting chap. 6, p. 124, Ooote on Mortgages.

■ It is very manifest that the sale by Hewett to Williams was ineffectual as against the plaintiff’s mortgage, for the [691]*691delivery of fbe deed was subsequent to it, tbe mortgage being duly recorded.

The motions for nonsuit and new trial are dismissed.

O’Neall, Glover, and Munro, JJ., concurred.

Wardlaw, J.

I'think that the conclusion attained by the Court in this case is legitimately drawn from the cases of Durand vs. Isaacs, (4 McC. 54,) and Stoney vs. Shultz, (1 Hill, Ch., 465): and those cases have been followed by so many others, in the construction given to the second exception which is contained in the proviso annexed to the second section of the Act of February, 1791, (5 Stat. 169,) that I will not venture to dissent now.(

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Related

Bartles v. Livingston
319 S.E.2d 707 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 S.C.L. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-bogan-scctapp-1858.