Perkins v. Loan & Exchange Bank

20 S.E. 759, 43 S.C. 39, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 8, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 759 (Perkins v. Loan & Exchange Bank) 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
Perkins v. Loan & Exchange Bank, 20 S.E. 759, 43 S.C. 39, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 124 (S.C. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Me. Chief Justice McItee.

The Fort Motte Lumber and Shingle Company purchased from James A. Peterkin, the ‘'timber leaf” upon a certain tract of land in Richland County, together with certain machinery, boilers &c., then on said land, and to secure the payment of the purchase money thereof, on the 8th of August, 1892, executed a mortgage to said Peter-kin upon all its stock of timber, lumber, and shingles, as well [43]*43that which it should thereafter manufacture and prepare for market, or otherwise acquire, as that which was then in existence, and also all the sheds, buildings, property, machinery, and plant then on the mill sites of said company, and also that which it should, from time to time thereafter, place on its said mill sites. This mortgage was duly assigned for value by said Peterkin to the defendant on the 13th of August, 1892, and the same was duly recorded, in the proper office, on the 22d of August, 1892. On the 23d of September, 1892, the said Lumber and Shingle Company entered into a written contract for the purchase of the several articles of personal property mentioned in the complaint from the plaintiff, consisting of machinery and other appliances to be used in its work as a portion of its “plant,” a copy of which contract is set out in the “Cáse,” and should be incorporated in the report of this case. In that contract it was stipulated that the title and ownership of the said property should remain in the plaintiff until the full purchase price was paid, and in case of default in payment, the property might be taken back, aud such payments as had been made, should be applied for rent, or the plaintiff might bring suit for the amount remaining unpaid.

Upon the execution of this contract, the property mentioned in the complaint was delivered to the said lumber and shingle company, and by it placed upon its mill sites. On the 20th of December, 1892, the defendant, upon breach of the condition of its mortgage, seized the said property, and took it into its possession, where it remained until it was destroyed by fire some time in August, 1893. In the meantime, to wit: on the 27th of June, 1893, the plaintiff demanded from the defendant possession of said property, which demand being refused, this action was commenced to recover damages for the conversion of said property. It is conceded that no part of the purchase money of the property in dispute was ever paid by the lumber and shingle company to the plaintiff; that the contract above referred to, for the purchase of said property, was never recorded until the 7th of February, 1893; and that the defendant never had any notice, either actual or constructive, of such contract until that date. All the material facts being con[44]*44ceded, a jury trial was waived, and the case was heard by his honor, Judge Hudson, upon the pleadings and the agreed statement of facts, who rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and from his judgment defendant appealed upon the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be repeated here, as the sole question presented is one of law, ■which of the two parties has the legal right to the property in dispute, under the agreed facts.

1 It seems to us that the first question to be determined is, what was the true nature and legal character of the contract between the plaintiff and the Fort Motte Lumber and Shingle Company, a copy of which is set out in the “Case,” under which the property in question was sold and delivered to said company by the plaintiff? Looking at the terms of that paper, in the light of the decisions of this court cited below, we cannot doubt that it was nothing more nor less than a mortgage on the property in dispute to secure the payment of the purchase money of said property. Talmadge v. Oliver, 14 S. C., 522; Herring v. Cannon, 21 S. C., 212; Straub v. Sereven, 19 S. C., 445; Talbott v. Sandifer, 27 S. C., 624; Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Smith, 40 S. C., 529.

2 If, then, this paper must be regarded as a mortgage, which was not recorded until the 7th day of February, 1893, and if, as it is conceded, the defendant had no notice of it, either at the time when the Fort Motte Lumber and Shingle Company purchased the property in question from the plaintiff, and the same went into its possession, or at the time when the defendant acquired possession by the seizure thereof under its mortgage in December, 1892, it follows necessarily that the defendant has the superior right. By section 1776 of the General Statutes of 1882, now incorporated in the Revised Statutes of 1893, as section 1968, it is declared that “all mortgages, or instruments of writing in the nature of a mortgage, of any property, real or personal, * * * shall be valid, so as to affect the right of subsequent creditors or purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, only when recorded within forty days,” &c., with a proviso in these words: “That the above mentioned deeds or instruments of writing, if recorded [45]*45subsequent to the expiration of said period of forty days, shall be valid to affect the rights of subsequent creditors and purchasers for valuable consideration without notice only from the date of such record.” And this court, in construing that section, in the case of King v. Fraser, 23 S. C., at page 569, held that a mortgage recorded after the time limited for that purpose had the same legal effect as if a new mortgage was given on the day of such record; and cites, with approval, the case of Cameron v. Marvin, 26 Kans., 622 (a case which we may say in passing is in principle very much like the case under consideration), where the same view is presented. So that whether we look to the dates of the two papers — the defendant’s mortgage and the contract under which plaintiff claims, which we have held to operate as a mortgage, or to the dates at which these two papers were recorded — it is very obvious that the defendant has the prior lien, and, therefore, the superior right.

Bnt while it is not disputed, and could not well be under the cases of Moore v. Byrum, 10 S. C., 452, Parker v. Jacobs, 14 S. C., 112, and Hirshkind v. Israel, 18 S. C., 157, that by a mortgage covering after acquired personal property, the mortgagee may obtain a lien upon such property after it is acquired by the mortgagor, it is earnestly contended by counsel for respondent that a mortgagee of after acquired property takes only a lien on the interest of the mortgagor, and if such property, when it is acquired, is subject to mortgages or other liens, the original mortgage does not displace such liens though they may be junior to it in point of time; and he cites in his argument several decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States to sustain his contention. But, as we understand it, the cases draw a distinction between a case where the mortgagor still retains possession of the acquired property, and a case where such property has passed into the possession of the original mortgagee, by a seizure under his mortgage. In the former, the mortgagee has only an equity to subject such property to the lien of his mortgage, which may be met and overcome by some superior equity, but in the latter the mortgagee acquired the legal title. It is observable that the cases cited from the Supreme Court of the United States were cases on the equity [46]*46side of the court, and it is noticeable that in one of them, Fosdick v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 759, 43 S.C. 39, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-loan-exchange-bank-sc-1895.