Ott v. Ott

188 S.E. 789, 182 S.C. 135, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1936
Docket14398
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 188 S.E. 789 (Ott v. Ott) 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
Ott v. Ott, 188 S.E. 789, 182 S.C. 135, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 22 (S.C. 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Boni-iam.

Preston Ott brought action in the County Court of Orangeburg County to foreclose a mortgage of real estate, which the complaint alleges was executed and delivered to him by Louie P. Ott, along with the bond which the mortgage was given to secure. The complaint alleges also that the bond has been lost, that in drawing the mortgage the scrivener made the mistake of inserting the name of Louie P. Ott at several places where the name of Preston Ott should *137 have been written, and asks that this mistake be remedied. It is further alleged in the complaint that “the bond and mortgage were made payable to ‘Preston Ott, Trustee,’ but in reality the consideration of $1,150.00 expressed in the deed was money that belonged to Preston Ott, and not as Trustee, and is due to him in his own right.”

Leroy Ott made default. Louie P. Ott and Viola Myers answered, saying, inter alia: That Mildred E. Ott died intestate, December 26, 1929, leaving her, surviving as her sole heirs-at-law and distributees, her husband, Preston Ott, and her children, Louie P. Ott, Viola Myers, and Leroy Ott; that Preston P. Ott was duly appointed administrator of her estate; that during the course of the administration of the estate, Louie P. Ott, at the suggestion of the administrator, executed and delivered to the administrator, as trustee, the bond and mortgage set out in the complaint; that the bond and mortgage were so made and delivered for the purpose of securing the payment of the loan made by the intestate Mildred E. Ott in her lifetime; that the bond and mortgage were made to Preston Ott as trustee on the distinct understanding that he would hold and collect such bond and mortgage for the benefit of himself and his three children as an asset of the estate of Mildred E. Ott.

The case was heard by the Honorable B. H. Moss, Judge of the County Court of Orangeburg, without a jury. His Honor, after taking the testimony and hearing arguments of counsel, filed his decree by which he found .as a matter of fact that the sum secured by the bond and mortgage, the subject of the action, is the individual property of the plaintiff, Preston Ott, and the amount due thereon as of that date was $1,507.36. As a matter of law, he found that the mortgage should be reformed so as to correct the mistake of the scrivener in inserting the name of Louie P. Ott in several places as mortgagee, whereas he was in fact the mortgagor. He ordered that plaintiff have judgment against Louie P. Ott for the sum of $1,507.36, and the additional *138 sum of $150.00 as attorneys’ fees He ordered the foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale of the mortgaged property.

Leroy Ott has filed in the record a disclaimer of any interest in the case. He did not testify.

The appeal from the decree is based on numerous exceptions. In our opinion the whole matter is settled by the determination of the question: Did Preston Ott hold the bond and mortgage as his individual property, or as trustee of his wife’s estate?

The case is one in chancery and was heard by the trial Judge without a jury. His findings of fact are, therefore, open to review by this Court.

The history of the dealings of these kinsfolk with each other is peculiar. It seems safe to say that Preston Ott put his money and property in his wife’s name for the reason, as he says: “I did not want certain people to know that I was lending money, or had some money to lend.”

When Alildred E. Ott died intestate December 26, 1929, her estate consisted of a tract of 26 acres of land, a mortgage for $1,600.00 given her by Louie P. Ott, a Liberty Bond for $1,000.00, an automobile and other personal property of some value. It is significant that Preston Ott was not made administrator of his wife’s estate until August, 1933. ITis wife died in December, 1929, the mortgage now being foreclosed was executed to Preston Ott the fourth day of April, 1930, three months after Mrs. Ott’s- death.

The oral testimony given by Preston Ott, on the one hand, and Louie P. Ott and Viola Myers ón the other hand, is wholly irreconcilable. The solution of the situation must rest upon the analysis of the undisputed facts.

Preston Ott contends that he lent the money, covered by the mortgage, to Louie P. Ott out of his own pocket. Inasmuch as it is undisputed, and is so found by the trial Judge, that about December 10, 1929, Louie P. Ott executed a mortgage to Mrs. Mildred E. Ott for the sum of $1,600.00, *139 and that certainly at least $1,178.37 was withdrawn from the Edisto National Bank where it was on deposit in the name of Mrs. Mildred E. Ott, the reasonable deduction is that when Preston Ott makes that statement, he means to say the money was his because he gave it to Mrs. Ott. It seems to be undisputed that he gave her the 26 acres of land, the $1,000.00 Liberty Bond, and the automobile. If he gave to Louie P. Ott the money that went into the mortgage to Mrs. Ott, why did he, after Mrs. Ott’s death, have the mortgage made to himself as trustee? If he did not want other people to know he had money to lend, he had but to leave the money in the name of his wife’s estate. He had as much right to the tract of land, the Liberty Bond, and automobile as he had to the money invested in the mortgage to Mrs. Ott’s estate. Yet he sells the Liberty Bond and the automobile as administrator and divides the proceeds among himself and the children, according to the statute of distribution. He has Louie P. Ott to pay the funeral expenses of his wife’s estate and credits the amount on the mortgage. He buys the land from the children and pays them for their interest in it. In other words, he treats all of this property, including this mortgage given by Louie to his mother, as the property of his wife’s estate “till a change comes over the spirit of his dream.” Then he does not wish to divide the proceeds of the mortgage with the children. Mrs. Myers, at folios 75-76 of the record, makes this statement, which is not denied or explained by plaintiff:

“Q. So your father asked you to give him titles? A. Yes, he asked us about it several times; he said he was going to get married again and wanted his second wife to get what he had.”

• We cannot escape the conviction that the clear preponderance of the evidence is against the findings of fact by the trial Court, to wit:

“1. That the Eleven Hundred Seventy-eight and 37/100 ($1,178.37) Dollars on deposit in the Edisto National Bank *140 during 1929 in the name of Mrs. Mildred E. Ott, actually belonged to the plaintiff.
“2. That on or about December 10, 1929, plaintiff made a loan of Sixteen Hundred ($1,600.00) Dollars of his own money to the defendant, Louie P. Ott, and took as evidence thereof, and security, therefor, a bond and mortgage executed by Louie P. Ott to Mrs. Mildred E- Ott.
“3. That Mrs. Mildred E. Ott, during her lifetime, was vested with the bare legal title in this bond and mortgage for the benefit of plaintiff.
“4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.E. 789, 182 S.C. 135, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ott-v-ott-sc-1936.