Pollock v. Pegues

51 S.E. 514, 72 S.C. 47, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 514 (Pollock v. Pegues) 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
Pollock v. Pegues, 51 S.E. 514, 72 S.C. 47, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 79 (S.C. 1905).

Opinions

June 30, 1905. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an appeal from a decree of his Honor, Judge James Aldrich. In order to *Page 59 understand the issues here involved, the pleadings will be reproduced, and are as follows:

"The complaint of the plaintiffs shows:

"1. That in the year A.D. 1901, the plaintiff, Carrie E. Pollock, was lawfully seized and possessed of all that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, in Chesterfield County, S.C. containing 400 acres, more or less, bounded * * * the said land having been sold under foreclosure or mortgage, held by the said Carrie E. Pollock, and bid off by the plaintiff, W.P. Pollock, as attorney (but no deed made), and the said Carrie E. Pollock being in possession thereof.

"2d. That in the fall of the said year, 1901, the said W. P. Pollock, as agent and attorney for the said Carrie E. Pollock, contracted orally with the defendant to lease or rent unto him the said plantation, at a yearly rental of $150 per annum and one-fourth of all crops made on the low grounds, the said lease being for an indefinite term of years; and at the same time, the said W.P. Pollock, as agent and attorney as aforesaid, agreed orally with the said James W. Pegues to sell unto him twenty-five acres of land in the southwest corner thereof, bounded by the Britt lands, the said public road and the plantation road leading through said plantation: Provided, That the same should not take in any buildings on said place; and later agreed, orally, with said defendant to sell unto him thirty-five instead of twenty-five acres, at $8 per acre, with interest; and in addition, if said thirty-five acres of land as laid off between the boundaries above given and a line parallel with said public road embraced the buildings on the place, the said James W. Pegues was to pay whatever the said W.P. Pollock charged for the said buildings, the said W.P. Pollock simply agreeing to charge a reasonable amount for such buildings, with interest.

"3d. That in pursuance of all the foregoing, the said James W. Pegues went into the possession of all the said plantation, and for the year A.D. 1902 he paid only about $88 on the rent — the said W.P. Pollock having consented *Page 60 to reduce the rent for said year to $100 on account of the poor crop made, and there is a balance due the plaintiff, Carrie E. Pollock, of about $12 on said rent for said year. That some time during the winter 1902-1903, or the spring of 1903, the said James W. Pegues paid unto the plaintiff, W.P. Pollock, as agent and attorney, the sum of $25, and requested that it be credited on the purchase of said thirty-five acres of land, which said amount is all the said defendant has ever paid on account of the purchase of said land, and for the year A.D. 1904, the said James W. Pegues only paid about $99.50 on the rent for said place for said year of $150, thereby leaving a balance due thereon of about $50.50.

"4th. That in the late fall of 1903, the plaintiff, W.P. Pollock, as attorney and agent as aforesaid, went to the said James W. Pegues and proposed to him, that in as much as he had an opportunity of selling the whole plantation, and the said defendant had not paid all rent due, and had paid practically nothing on the purchase price of said thirty-five acres of land, that he would like the said defendant to agree to give up all claim to the land and consent for said W.P. Pollock to convey same to another, and proposed if he would do so that he would cancel all indebtedness for rent and give the said Pegues the free use of as much of the land as he cared to cultivate for the year 1904, and finally to give him $50 in cash in addition. That the said defendant, after more than one conference with said W.P. Pollock, declined said proposition. Thereupon said Pollock demanded of said Pegues payment for said thirty-five acres of land at $8 per acre (to wit: $280), and payment for the buildings thereon, which are embraced in said thirty-five acres, the sum of $150, which is very reasonable, if not very low price for same, and interest thereon, less the $25 paid, and the balance due on rent, and offered to at once make deed to said defendant to said land; but the said defendant positively refused and failed to pay same, and said he would not and could not pay more than $280 — *Page 61 that is, $8 per acre for the thirty-five acres. The said W.P. Pollock then proposed that he would go ahead and convey said place, and that said Pegues might sue this plaintiff, and whatever amount he might get judgment for would be promptly paid, which proposition was declined. Thereupon the said W.P. Pollock proposed that he would convey said lands to another, and the said J.W. Pegues should yield possession thereof, and if he and said Pegues could not agree on an amicable settlement, that they would each appoint a disinterested person, and those two could appoint a third person, who should fix the amount, if anything, which should be paid to said Pegues, and the said Pegues agreed to the said proposition and agreed for said Pollock to convey said lands.

"5th. The said W.P. Pollock, as agent and attorney for said Carrie E. Pollock, for the sake of convenience, had the clerk of Court to make title to him, and after the said agreement with the said Pegues, which he communicated to M.H. Stacy, he conveyed by warranty deed all of said tract of land to said M.H. Stacy, and the said M.H. Stacy by deed conveyed same to L.E. Stacy, who now holds the title thereto, but the possession was retained by W.P. Pollock, as agent and attorney as aforesaid, until the first of January, 1905.

"6th. That thereafter the said J.W. Pegues demanded of said W.P. Pollock the sum of $1,000, which was refused, and said W.P. Pollock proposed to leave the matter to three disinterested parties, as was the agreement, but the said Pegues refused to do so, notwithstanding that he had agreed that he would do so, and he now unlawfully withholds possession of said thirty-five acres and the buildings.

"7th. That the original agreement between the parties has been broken by the said defendant, and in addition thereto the same has been superceded by the subsequent agreement above set forth, but the claim of the defendant is a cloud on the title.

"Wherefore, plaintiffs pray judgment that the original *Page 62 agreement between parties be cancelled and set aside, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem meet and proper, and for costs."

"The defendant, answering the complaint herein, says:

"First, for a first defense:

"I. That he admits the allegations contained in the first paragraph of said complaint.

"II. That he denies the allegations of the second paragraph of the complaint as to the rental of the plantation being for $150 per annum, and alleges that the rent to be paid for that part of the plantation not bought by this defendant was to be two bales of cotton, 500 pounds weight each, and one-fourth of all the crops made on the low grounds, except such crops as were planted in the low grounds by this defendant; this he was to have free of charge for looking after the other crops made on the low grounds for W.P. Pollock. And he alleges that the said Pollock received one-fourth of all such crops; and he denies. also, that he was to pay for the house what the said W.P. Pollock charged for the said building, and alleges, on the contrary, that he was to pay a reasonable charge for the buildings, if they were embraced in the lands bought, when they were marked out.

"III.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fidelity-Bankers' Trust Co. v. Little
181 S.E. 913 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1935)
Smith v. Williams
139 S.E. 625 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
Williams v. Bruton
113 S.E. 319 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 514, 72 S.C. 47, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollock-v-pegues-sc-1905.