Pittman Bros. v. Raysor

27 S.E. 475, 49 S.C. 469, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 S.E. 475 (Pittman Bros. v. Raysor) 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
Pittman Bros. v. Raysor, 27 S.E. 475, 49 S.C. 469, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 129 (S.C. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

The plaintiffs commenced this action on the 26th of January, 1895, to foreclose a mortgage of real estate. The complaint alleges that G. W. Egan and A. J. Pittman were copartners, doing business in Charleston, under the firm name of Pittman Bros., at the times mentioned in the complaint; that on the 1st of January, 1894, the defendant, S. J. Raysor, executed her bond to M. A. Moye, H. J. Moody, and A. B. Hooten, copartners as Moye, Moody & Co., conditioned for the payment of $1,500 one year from the date thereof, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, and to secure its payment executed a mortgage on a tract of land in Barnwell County; that said mortgage was duly recorded; that thereafter A. B. Hooten assigned his interest in said mortgage to M. A. Moye and H. J. Moody, and that M. A. Moye and H. J. Moody, copartners as Moye, Moody & Co., assigned said bond and mortgage to Pittman Bros.; that the sum of $1,263.40, with interest from the 1st of January, 1894, is due thereon, and prays for-a foreclosure of the mortgage.

The defendant, in her answer, sets up the defense that she was a married woman at the time of the execution of said mortgage, and that it was given to secure the payment of her husband’s indebtedness.

After hearing the case, upon testimony taken before the master, his Honor, Judge Earle, filed the, following decree: “This is an action on the part of the plaintiffs to foreclose a mortgage on real estate in said county. The defendant, S. J. Raysor, sets up that she was a married woman, and the said mortgage and bond was given to secure the purchase, by her husband, of a one-third interest, bought in the mercantile firm composed of M. A. Moye, H. J. Moody, and A. B. Hooten, and that the said mortgage was given to secure such purchase. It also appeared in that mortgage that the defendant declared that said mortgage was given for the benefit of her separate estate.

“The said mortgage was originally made to the firm of Moye, Moody & Co., composed of M. A. Mo3m, H. J. Moody, [471]*471and A. B. Hooten, and the said A. B. Hooten transferred his interest in the said bond and mortgage to the said M. A. Moye and H. J. Moody. And it also appears that thereafter the said H. J. Moody and M. A. Moye transferred and assigned the said bond and mortgage, in consideration of past advances, to the said Pittman Bros., as appeared on the face of the assignment, that same was in consideration of past advances.

“I am satisfied that the position of Mrs. Raysor was that of a surety in the execution of the said mortgage. The plaintiffs claim, however, that the defendant is estopped from the declaration contained in her mortgage from setting up such defenses. I am satisfied, also, that this contention on the part of the plaintiffs would be correct, if they were in a position to take advantage of such estoppel, but their position was not changed or altered by reason of such statement, made in the mortgage, by the defendant. The mortgage was transferred to secure past indebtedness, and the plaintiffs, therefore, parted with nothing of present value in consideration of said assignment. The action of foreclosure cannot be sustained, and it is ordered and adjudged, that the complaint be dismissed with costs.”

The plaintiffs appealed upon the following exceptions: “1. Because his Honor erred in finding as a fact that the bond and mortgage of the defendant, S. J. Raysor, was assigned to the plaintiffs, Pittman Bros., by Moye, Moody & Co., in consideration of past indebtedness; because there is no evidence whatever sustaining such a conclusion of fact. 2. Because his Honor erred in finding that it appeared upon the face of the assignment from Moye, Moody & Co. to the plaintiffs that the same was made in consideration of past advances made by the plaintiffs to Moye, Moody & Co.; whereas it is submitted that the proper and obvious construction of the terms of said assignment is that the said advances were made in consideration of said assignment, and his Honor erred in not finding that the plaintiffs were entitled to a judgment for foreclosure under said complaint. [472]*4723. That the defendant having declared in said mortgage that the same was given for the benefit of her separate estate, the burden of proof was upon her to show that the estoppel thereby created was removed by the circumstances under which the plaintiffs took the assignment of the bond and mortgage securing the same, and the defendant failed to prove such circumstances; and his Honor erred in finding that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a judgment for foreclosure under said complaint. 4. That even if it were true that the mortgage was assigned by Moye, Moody & Co. to the plaintiffs for a past indebtedness, his Honor erred in finding as a matter of law that thereby the plaintiffs could not sustain an action of foreclosure; whereas it is submitted that a past indebtedness was a good consideration for the transfer, and the estoppel created against the defendant by ber declaration was not in any manner impaired thereby, or the plaintiffs thereby deprived of the benefits thereof. 5. Because his Honor erred in holding that the position of the defendant was that of a surety in the execution of said mortgage; whereas it is submitted that said bond and mortgage so given by her was to enable her husband to purchase an interest in the business of Moye, Moody & Co., and it was not given to secure a debt of her husband, but was a gift which she was competent to make to her husband.”

The defendant also gave notice that she would ask that the said decree be sustained, upon the following additional grounds: “1. Because it appears from the evidence in this case that M. A. Moye and H. J. Moody, the original mortgagees, who assigned the bond and mortgage herein to the plaintiffs, had full notice of the object and purpose of the execution of a bond and mortgage; that the same was given to secure a debt of the defendant’s husband, and that they were not misled by the statement contained in the said mortgage that the same was given to secure a debt incurred for the benefit of defendant’s separate estate; and, therefore, the plaintiffs, as assignees of the said bond and mortgage, [473]*473took the same subject to all the defenses which existed between the original parties to said contract. 2. Because the original mortgagees, Moye, Moody & Co., had full knowledge, at and before said bond and mortgage were executed and delivered, that the mortgagor, Mrs. S. J. Raysor, was thereby assuming the position of a surety for her husband in the purchase of an interest in the business of Moye, Moody & Co., and that, therefore, under the law, the said mortgage was absolutely null and void in its creation, and conld not be revived afterwards by an estoppel. 3. Because the plaintiffs failed to show that they were misled by the declaration contained in the said mortgage, or that their assignees were misled to their prejudice by the said statement. 4. Because the assignees of a bond and mortgage under seal, as .in this case, take the same subject to all the defenses existing between the original parties.”

The exceptions raise the following questions: 1st. Was the mortgage executed by the defendant to secure the payment of her husband’s indebtedness? 2d. Was the assignment of the mortgage to the plaintiffs in consideration of past indebtedness? 3d. Was the defendant estopped by her declarations in the mortgage from setting up the defense hereinbefore mentioned?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 S.E. 475, 49 S.C. 469, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittman-bros-v-raysor-sc-1897.