Palmetto Bank & Trust Co. v. Grimsley

133 S.E. 437, 134 S.C. 493, 51 A.L.R. 42, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 20, 1926
Docket11993
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 437 (Palmetto Bank & Trust Co. v. Grimsley) 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
Palmetto Bank & Trust Co. v. Grimsley, 133 S.E. 437, 134 S.C. 493, 51 A.L.R. 42, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 62 (S.C. 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This action was commenced at a time not stated in the record for appeal, but evidently between September 27, 1924, and December 12, 1924, for the foreclosure of a mortgage given by the defendant, C. D. Grimsley, to the plaintiff Bank securing the payment of a note dated September 27, 1923, due September 27, 1924, for $15,000.00, with interest from ,date at 6 per cent., and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. The mortgage covered eight separate pieces of real estate, including, as Tract No. 1, the residence lot of the mortgagor.

The complaint is in the usual form. The answer, prolix, argumentative, and lacking in essential averments, manifestly was intended to set up the defense that the defendant was induced to execute the mortgage by promises of the Bank which, at the time of making them, it never intended to fulfill, based upon the well-recognized principle of law that the making of a promise (which has induced the execution of a contract), by one who had no intention at the time of performing it, constitutes a fraud on account of which the contract may be rescinded.

The promises alleged by the defendant, as the inducement of the contract evidenced by the note and mortgage, which alone need to be considered, are: (1) That the note would be carried by the Bank as renewed paper as long as the defendant desired it to be carried, upon payment of the interest; (2) that the Bank would finance certain building and improvement plans of the defendant by which portions of the mortgaged property would be placed upon the market, the proceeds of sale to be applied to the note and mortgage, so as to enable the defendant gradually to liquidate the debt; (3) that “in the event of the death of the said C. D. Grims *496 ley before the mortgage above mentioned has been satisfied by payment, the said Bank will release from the lien of the above-mentioned mortgage the residence lot above mentioned, designated in said mortgage as Lot No. 1.”

After the service of the answer, the plaintiff, on December 12, 1924, gave the defendant notice of a motion to be made before his Honor, Judge Shipp, at chambers, at Florence, on December 30, 1924, for an order striking out the answer as sham and irrelevant, and for judgment upon the ground that it was frivolous and not responsive to the pleadings. .

The matter came on to be heard by his Honor, Judge Shipp, who filed an order dated January 10, 1924, granting the plaintiff’s motion to strike out the answer, and referring the case to the Master of Florence County to take the testimony and to report his conclusions of law and fact. From this order the defendant has appealed upon exceptions which fairly raise the matters hereinafter considered.

The-appeal is not to be determined by the application of either the “parol evidence rule,” nor by the rule that the details of a charge of fraud must be specifically stated, but by the principle above stated that the making of a promise (which has induced the execution of a contract), by one who had no intention at the time of performing it, constitutes a fraud, on account of which the contract may be rescinded; and by the further principle that, if a valid defense is imperfectly stated, the remedy of the plaintiff is a demurrer, and not a motion to strike out the answer.

The situations of the respective parties lend color to the contention of the defendant in reference to the alleged promises, the truth of which is not now before us in issue, nor the truth of the further essential element that the Bank made them with the intention at the time of' refusing to carry them out. The defendant who appears from the mortgage to have been the owner of considerable property, embarked *497 in the automobile business, m'anaged by others, he being the responsible member of the organization; a form of commercial enterprise, which in these latter days, compared with other commercial enterprises, is as the martial prowess of David compared with that of Saul: “Saul hath slain his thousands and David his ten thousands.” The business had been wrecked by the dishonest conduct of the manager (as alleged), with a large debit to the Bank. The Bank naturally was anxious for the debt to appear in better shape. The defendant appreciated his obligation, but in the deflation period was unable at the time to respond. Time, the hope of the financially distressed, was what he desired, and what he alleges the Bank promised. The note was made payable in 12 months. The defendant (as he alleges) knew that he could not meet the note at maturity, and it is fair to assume that the Bank also knew this fact. In addition to this, the defendant hoped and expected to subdivide his property, build houses, sell the lots, and apply the proceeds to the note. The execution of a mortgage to the Bank would completely exhaust his resources for raising the necessary funds for this .purpose, and it was on this account that he alleges that the Bank promised to finance that project which was to their mutual advantage.

Such contemporaneous agreements may have been obnoxious to the “parol evidence rule,” if unaccompanied by any circumstances of deception; but if those promises were made to induce the execution of the mortgage, with the concealed purpose to disregard them, the “Parol Evidence Rule” cuts no figure.

In Coleman v. Stevens, 124 S. C., 8; 117 S. E., 305, the Court adopted the statement by his Honor, Judge Edward Mclver, in his charge to the jury:

“A future promise is not fraudulent, unless such a future promise was part of a general * * * scheme to induce the signing of a paper or to make one act, as he otherwise would not have acted, to. his injury.”

In 12 R. C. L., 257, it is said:

*498 “So, if through inducements held out by one person, even by means of a promise alone, another is influenced to change his position, so that he cannot be placed in statu quo, and will be seriously damaged unless the promise is fulfilled, then the refusal to perform is fraud. There is even authority to the effect that false representation as to future events will constitute fraud, where those events depend upon the acts of the party making the representation and form the inducement whereby the other party is led into the transaction.”
“When a promise is made with no intention of performance, and for the very purpose of accomplishing a fraud, it is a most apt and effectual means to that end, and the victim has a remedy by action or defense.” Goodwin v. Horne, 60 N. H., 485.
“A promise is usually without the domain of the law, unless it creates a contract, but if made when there is no intention of performance, and for the purpose of inducing action by another, it is fraudulent, and may be made the ground of relief.” Herndon v. Durham & S. Railway Co., 161 N. C., 650; 77 S. E., 683.

In Hill v. Gettys, 135 N. C., 376; 47 S. E., 449, 450, in ordering the cancellation of a mortgage, the Court says :

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133 S.E. 437, 134 S.C. 493, 51 A.L.R. 42, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmetto-bank-trust-co-v-grimsley-sc-1926.