Peoples Nat. Bank of Greenville v. Hudson

184 S.E. 102, 179 S.C. 399, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 10, 1936
Docket14222
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 S.E. 102 (Peoples Nat. Bank of Greenville v. Hudson) 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
Peoples Nat. Bank of Greenville v. Hudson, 184 S.E. 102, 179 S.C. 399, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 71 (S.C. 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Baker.

In an action between Peoples National Bank of Greenville, S. C., as executor of the estate of D. D. Davenport, plaintiff, against E. S. Hudson, as executor of the estate of E. P. Hudson, and as trustee for Milas E. Hudson et al., defendants, it was decreed that 100 acres of land in Greenville County, which had come into the possession of E. S. Hudson through the will of his father, Ed P. Hudson, and a deed executed but not delivered at the date of the execution of the will by the said Ed P. Hudson to the said E. S. Hudson, should be sold at public auction by the Master for Greenville County to the highest bidder for cash. The original decree provided, if any party to the action, or any child of the son, E. S. Hudson, should bid in the property, they would not be required to deposit at the time of the making of their bid a 5 per cent, deposit required of all other bidders. The land was offered for sale on sales day in February, 1935, and held open under the Act of 1933 (Act May 16, 1933, 38 St. at Large, p. 511, § 1, amending Act April 11, 1932, 37 St. at Large, p. 1529, § 1) for 30 days. During those 30 days only Helen Hudson, the appellant herein, J. P. Rosemond and Mills Hunter, entered bids. Appellant was the successful bidder, but did not comply with her bid, and the land was resold upon the same terms and conditions on a subsequent sales day and held open for 30 days. No one outside of the Hudson family, J. P. Rosemond, and Mills Hunter entered any bid. Again the terms of the sale were not complied with, and thereupon the attorney for plaintiff, under a proper proceeding, procured the decree for the sale of the land to be amended, so as to delete from the original decree any exception with reference to requiring a deposit by bidders; said amended decree providing as follows:

*401 “ * * * The successful bidder at the time the bid is accepted shall be required to make a deposit of cash or certified check in a sum not exceeding 5 per cent of the amount of his bid, as evidence of his good faith. Should said purchaser not comply with his bid within a period of ten days, said deposit is to be forfeited and applied to the payment of the cost of resale and the balance on the indebtedness proved against the estate and the Master shall thereafter readvertise and resell the premises at the risk of the former purchaser."

Under this amended decree the land was put up for sale on sales day in July, 1935, and held open for 30 days; that is, until 12 m., July 31, 1935. In the office of the Master on said 31st day of July, 1935, and between 11:30 a. m., and 12 m., the following bids were offered upon the said 100 acres of land, to wit:

Appellant, through her attorney ............ $5,000.00

J. P. Rosemond, through his attorney........ 5,100.00

Mills Hunter ............................ 6,000.00

J. P. Rosemond, through attorney........... 6,100.00

Mills Hunter ............................ 7,000.00

Appellant, through her attorney ............ 6,105.00

The decree, in addition to the terms hereinbefore quoted, contained the following: “The terms of sale to be cash, the purchaser to pay for papers and stamps.”

The terms of the sale, as set out in the advertisement of the Master of the sale, contained the following provision: “Each succssful bidder, at the time the bid is accepted, will be required to deposit with the Master the sum- of 5 per cent of the amount of bid in cash or certified check as evidence of his good faith.”

It is uncontroverted that the only bidder making a legal deposit with the Master at the time of the bidding was the appellant herein. J. P. Rosemond had deposited with the Master at a former sale a check for $180.00, which had not been returned to him, and Mills Hunter, either during the *402 bidding or following his bid of $7,000.00, tendered to the Master his personal check on the People National Bank, Greenville, S. C., payable to the order of cash or to the Master, in the sum of $350.00, and the Master accepted same, but said check was not certified, and at the time of issuing the check Mills Hunter did not have money on deposit with said bank sufficient to pay said check. At the time the attorney for appellant bid, he had the actual money with him, and handed to the Master sufficient money to cover 5 per cent, of his bid of $6,105.00. The attorney for appellant took the position at the bidding that Mills Hunter, not having complied with the terms of the decree of sale and as set out in the advertisement, was not entitled to have his bid considered as the highest bid, and that the highest legal bid was the $6,105.00 which he made for appellant. The Master retained both the money handed him by the attorney for appellant and the check of Mills Hunter, which check was deposited by the Master for collection, and on the following day it was returned for “insufficient funds.” Mills Hunter then added to his name on the check the words “Attorney in Fact,” and this check was then honored by the bank on the second day after the bidding.

Under the foregoing statement of facts, appellant herein brought a petition in the cause making E. Inman, as Master, and J. P. Rosemond and Mills Hunter, the other two bidders, respondents, praying that this Court order and direct the Master to receive her bid as the highest bid, and that she be declared the successful bidder at the last-mentioned sale on July 31, 1935. J. P. Rosemond did not answer, but Mills Hunter answered, alleging that, with the consent of the Master, he gave a check for $350.00 to bind his bid, and that, before the petition was filed and the rule based upon the petition was issued, the Master had collected the money on the check, and then had the $350.00, and further answered that he was acting for the protection of his wife, for whom he is committee, and that his bid amounted to $895.00 more than the bid of petitioner-ap *403 pellant, and that it was to the best interest of the creditors that his bid be accepted.

The matter came on to be heard before Hon. G. Dewey Oxner, resident Judge, who found, as a matter of fact, that appellant was the only bidder who had complied with the terms of the decree of sale and the advertisement by the Master of the sale, and held, as a matter of law, that the Master had no power to alter the terms of the decree. However, after reaching this conclusion, which was the only issue raised by the pleadings, he reached the further conclusion that, due to the fact that the Master accepted the check of Blunter during the bidding and proceeded to collect the same, the sale had been so irregular, resulting possibly in a chilling of the bidding, that both the bid of appellant and Hunter should be rejected and that there should be a resale of the property at some subsequent salesday, and he so ordered, citing as authority therefor the cases of In re Ragland, 172 S. C., 544, 174 S. E., 592, 594; Poole v. Insurance Company, 174 S. C., 150, 177 S. E., 24, 27.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.E. 102, 179 S.C. 399, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-nat-bank-of-greenville-v-hudson-sc-1936.