Montgomery v. Scott

9 S.C. 20, 1877 S.C. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 29, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 S.C. 20 (Montgomery v. Scott) 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
Montgomery v. Scott, 9 S.C. 20, 1877 S.C. LEXIS 4 (S.C. 1877).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

McIver, A. J.

The object of this action is to have a bond and mortgage of real estate, which had been signed in due form by the plaintiff, in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, in favor of the defendants, Scott & Son, canceled, upon the ground that the plaintiff had been induced to sign the same by the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant Houston that the paper she was signing was only a recogpizance for his appearance at the [33]*33Court of Sessions to answer to an indictment to be preferred against him, whereas, in fact, the bond was the joint and several obligation of Houston and the plaintiff to pay Scott & Son $1,000 one year from its date, secured by a mortgage of real estate, the property of the plaintiff, signed by the plaintiff alone. The defendants, Scott & Son, in their answer, (the other defendant, Houston, having made default,) deny all knowledge or suspicion of the fraud alleged, and say that, having received the bond and mortgage for full consideration and without notice or suspicion of the fraud alleged, the plaintiff has no cause of action against them, but that, if she has suffered loss, it is the result of her own misplaced confidence in the defendant Houston, and to him alone must she look for redress. The issues of law and of fact having been referred to a Referee, he made his report, wherein he finds as matters of fact:

1. That the bond and mortgage were executed by the plaintiff, but that she was induced to do so by the false and fraudulent representations of Houston that they were nothing but a bond for his appearance at Court.

2. That upon the execution of these papers they passed into the hands of Houston, who very soon afterwards delivered them to Scott & Son “to secure a debt of some $1,600 which he owed them for so much money by them lent and advanced to him; that upon receiving from the said C. J. Houston the said bond and mortgage deed, the defendants, Edwin J. Scott & Son, delivered and returned to said C. J. Houston other securities for his said debt which he had previously deposited with them, amounting to a large sum, and that when the said bond and mortgage deed were so delivered to them by the said C. J. Houston, they, the said Edwin J. Scott & Son, had no knowledge, notice or suspicion of the said fraudulent means by which said O. J. Houston had procured the said bond and mortgage from the said plaintiff.”

And he finds as matter of law that the bond, so far as the liability of the plaintiff thereon is concerned, and the mortgage are invalid, and that she is entitled to have the same delivered up and canceled, and that the costs should be paid by defendant Houston.

To this report exceptions were filed, both by the plaintiff and by the defendants, Scott & Son, which, being overruled by the Circuit Judge, are again presented here by way of appeal. The defendants, Scott & Son, take several exceptions, as well to the findings of fact as to the conclusions of law, which, from the view we take [34]*34of this case, it will be unnecessary to consider in detail. For, while this is a case in which it would be entirely competent for this Court to review the findings of fact as well as the conclusions of law of the Court below, and while such review might well be invited by the conflict in the testimony, which seems to have been so great that the able and experienced Referee could only reach his conclusions after much hesitation, prompting him to a suggestion that perhaps the safer and more satisfactory course would have been to have submitted the issue of fraud to a jury, in which suggestion we fully concur, though, of course, we are not to be understood as interfering with the right of parties to choose their own mode of trial by ordering such a trial, yet, as the case must go back for a new trial upon another ground hereafter to be noticed, we do not propose to prejudice the interest of either party upon such new trial by giving expression to any views which we might take of the testimony. The only question, therefore, which we propose to consider is that raised by one of the exceptions taken by the defendants, Scott & Son, namely, whether it is not necessary that it should be made to appear not merely that the plaintiff was induced by the fraud of a third person (Houston) to sign the bond and mortgage, but that, without negligence on her part, she was so induced to sign these papers, before she can ask the Court for the relief demanded against the holders, who were innocent of any knowledge of such fraud at the time they, for valuable consideration, took such bond and mortgage. It will be observed that this is a case in which the plaintiff seeks relief, which was formerly obtainable alone in a Court of equity, and the rule of that Court, which we consider still binding on this Court in the adjudication of a case to which it is appropriate, notwithstanding the fact that the Court of Equity has been abolished, was that “ a party coming into a Court of equity is bound to show that his title to relief is unmixed with any gross misconduct or negligence of himself or his agents.”- — -Story Eq., § 105. Chief Justice Marshall, also, in Marine Insurance Company vs. Hodgson, (7 Cr., 332,) seems to have recognized the correctness of this rule. In speaking of the power of a Court of equity to restrain parties from availing themselves of the benefit of judgments obtained at law, he uses this language: “It may safely be said that any fact which clearly proves it to be against conscience to execute a judgment * * * of which he might have availed himself at law, but was prevented by fraud or [35]*35accident, unmixed with any fault or negligence in himself or his agents, will justify an application to a Court of Chancery.” (See, also, Penny vs. Martin, 4 Johns. Ch., 566.)

Again, Story, in Section 200, a, in speaking of a purchaser who asks to be relieved from a purchase made on the ground of misrepresentations by the vendor, says: “ If he does not avail himself of the knowledge or means of knowledge open to himself or his agents, he cannot be heard to say that he was deceived by the vendor’s misrepresentations. * * * It is his own folly and laches not to use the means of knowledge within his reach, and he may properly impute any loss or injury in such a case to his own negligence and indiscretion. Courts of equity do not sit for the purpose of relieving parties, under ordinary circumstances, who refuse to exercise a reasonable diligence or discretion.” This rule, which has received the sanction of this eminent text writer, as well as of Courts of the highest authority, is but the expression of a natural feeling of equity which would prompt any just man to say that where one comes into a Court of equity and asks, against an innocent party, the interposition of its extraordinary powers, to protect him from danger or loss occasioned by the fraud of a third party, he ought to be required to show that he has in no way, either by his misconduct or negligence, contributed to the perpetration of the fraud, from the consequences of which he seeks to be relieved at the expense of such innocent party. An examination of the decided cases, which seem to be but few in number, will show that this rule has been applied even by Courts of law in cases analogous to the one now under consideration. In Foster vs. McKinnon, 38 L. J. R., (N.

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Related

Kimbrell v. Taylor
133 S.E. 829 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.C. 20, 1877 S.C. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-scott-sc-1877.