Pace v. Still

166 S.E. 494, 167 S.C. 415, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 1, 1932
Docket13500
StatusPublished

This text of 166 S.E. 494 (Pace v. Still) 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
Pace v. Still, 166 S.E. 494, 167 S.C. 415, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 213 (S.C. 1932).

Opinions

On rehearing November 15, 1932. The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Boni-iam.

*417 This case came to this Court heretofore and the opinion is reported in 160 S. C., 28, 158 S. E., 120. We take from that opinion the statement of facts upon which that appeal was heard:

“This is an action to foreclose a mortgage given by the defendant, Ethel Still, to the plaintiff, J. E. Pace, dated April 9, 1928, to secure the payment of a note of Ethel Still and her husband, R. B. Still, to J. E. Pace, dated April 9, 1928, payable April 9, 1929, for $4,000.00, with interest from date at 8 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually, and attorney’s fees. The mortgage covered two tracts of land, aggregating- about 10 acres, in the suburbs of the City of Greenville.
“The circumstances leading up to the execution of this mortgage, and which have given rise to the present controversy, mainly between Pace and the defendants Gallivan and Eeroy Mahaffey, are somewhat complicated and may thus be detailed:
“The defendant, Eeroy Mahaffey, in April, 1926, was the owner of the two tracts covered by the mortgage of Mrs. Still to Pace, above referred to; on April 6, 1926, he conveyed the property to R. B. Still, husband of Mrs. Still, at a fixed price, and took from R. B. Still a note for $6,000.00, dated on that day, payable on April 6, 1927, with interest from date at 8 per cent, per annum, and secured it by a mortgage upon the two tracts above referred to. Later, on July 31, 1926, R. B. Still conveyed the property to his wife, Ethel Still, who assumed payment of the $6,000.00 mortgage which R. B. Still had given to Eeroy Mahaffey.
“On April 19, 1926, Eeroy Mahaffey purchased certain property at Sans Souci (near Greenville), from one Geo. R. Koester, at approximately $8,500.00. He paid a part •cash and borrowed from the defendant, Gallivan, $5,900.00, with which to complete the purchase. He gave Gallivan a note for this loan, and secured it by a mortgage upon the Koester property and an assignment, as additional security, *418 of the note and mortgage which R. B. Still had given to Leroy Mahaffey. This assignment was in writing, dated April 19, 1926, and duly recorded on the same day. The note which Mahaffey had given to Gallivan for $5,900.00 fell due on April 19, 1927; upon it nothing had been paid. At some time, not definitely appearing, but probably in the early part of 1928, Gallivan delivered to B. C. Mahaffey, father of Leroy, for collection, the $6,000.00 note and mortgage which Still had given to Leroy and which he had assigned to Gallivan, retaining in his possession the $5,900.00 note and mortgage on the Koester place which Leroy had given to him. It is not entirely clear, but it appears that B. C. Mahaffey delivered the $6,000.00 note and mortgage to D. B. Leatherwood, a member of the law firm of Hodges & Leatherwood, for collection. The Stills were being pressed for payment of the $6,000.00 mortgage, and at a conference held in the office of Hodges & Leatherwood, at which Leatherwood, R. B. Still, B. C. Mahaffey, Leroy Mahaffey, and Pace were present, in April, 1928, it was agreed that Pace should lend to Mr. and Mrs. Still $4,000.00, upon their note for that amount secured by a mortgage upon the two tracts to be executed by Mrs. Still who held the title, and a release by Leroy Mahaffey of the $6,000.00 mortgage which had been given by R. B. Still to Leroy Mahaffey, in favor of the proposed mortgage for $4,000.00 to be given to Pace, the proceeds of the loan to be paid to Leroy Mahaffey and applied to the $6,000.00 mortgage. It seems to have been overlooked that the $6,000.00 mortgage had, as stated, been assigned to Gallivan as collateral security to the note for $5,900.00, which he had given to Gallivan, although the assignment of the $6,000.00 mortgage by Leroy Mahaffey to Gallivan was upon record. The note for $4,-000.00 was executed by Mr. and Mrs. Still to Pace as also the mortgage by Mrs. Still to Pace; a release of the $6,-000.00 mortgage in favor of Pace was executed by Leroy Mahaffey; Pace gave check for $4,000.00 payable to Plodges *419 & Leatherwood who indorsed it to Leroy Mahaffey who paid it to Gallivan, who credited it upon the $5,900.00 note and mortgage which Leroy Mahaffey had given him, as of April 19, 1928.
“Mr. and Mrs. Still having failed to pay the note and mortgage of $4,000.00 which had been given to Pace, the present action for foreclosure was instituted on October 23, 1929, the plaintiff claiming the first lien upon the two tracts of land; the complaint was in the usual form.
“The defendant Gallivan answered claiming the first lien upon the property under the $6,000.00 mortgage assigned to him by Leroy Mahaffey, upon which he acknowledged payment of $480.00 on April 5, 1927, and $4,000.00 on May 12, 1928, and demanding judgment of foreclosure.
“The plaintiff replied to the answer of Gallivan claiming that Gallivan authorized and ratified the release executed by Leroy Mahaffey in favor of the Pace mortgage and is estopped from denying its validity; also, that Gallivan held the $6,000.00 mortgage as collateral security to the $5,-900.00 mortgage which Leroy Mahaffey had given him and that he should be required to exhaust his primary security, the mortgage upon the Koester property, before resorting to the property covered by the plaintiff’s $4,000.00 mortgage.
“The defendant, Leroy Mahaffey, answered the complaint denying the material allegations and putting the plaintiff to proof; he denied that he had executed a release of the $6,000.00 mortgage to Pace and re-enforced the claim of Gallivan to a first lien upon the Still property under his assignment of that mortgage.”

After the remittitur came down, both the defendant, Mahaffey, and the plaintiff, Pace, moved to tax the Supreme Court costs in his favor; the clerk of Court taxed them in favor of the respondent, Pace, which ruling was confirmed by the circuit Court, and an appeal from that order is also involved herein. The defendants, Mahaffey and Gallivan, petitioned for rehearing or modification of the opinion—-on *420 grounds set out in the Transcript of Record—which petition was refused.

Acting upon what they construed to be the direction of this Court in the opinion in the former case to bring in the mortgage given to the defendant Gallivan by the defendant Mahaffey on the Koester place, the attorneys for plaintiff served an amended complaint, which differed from the original complaint only by the allegations contained in paragraphs 7, 8, and 9 of the amended complaint, which are in these words:

“Par. 7. That the defendants, Leroy Mahaffey and J. F. Gallivan, are also made parties to this action for the reason the defendant, J. F. Gallivan, appears from the record to be the owner and holder of a certain mortgage for $5,900.00 given by Leroy Mahaffey to J. F. Gallivan on the 19th day of April, 1926, and recorded in Mortgage Book 139, page 91, R. M. C. office for Greenville County, which mortgage covers the following described premises: (The Koester property.)
“Par. 8. That the note and mortgage held by J.

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Related

Pace v. Still
158 S.E. 120 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1931)
Carter v. Tanners Leather Co.
81 N.E. 902 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1907)
Cunningham v. Cauthen
25 S.E. 87 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 494, 167 S.C. 415, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pace-v-still-sc-1932.