Reid v. McGowan

5 S.E. 215, 28 S.C. 74, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 215 (Reid v. McGowan) 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
Reid v. McGowan, 5 S.E. 215, 28 S.C. 74, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 19 (S.C. 1888).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Simpson.

The action below was brought to foreclose two mortgages executed by the appellant, McGowan, to the plaintiff, respondent, and covering the same tract of land described in the first mortgage as the McGowan tract, containing 200 acres, with certain boundaries; and in the second as the. home place, containing 200 acres, more or less, with nearly same boundaries as the first — the first intended to secure a bond of $1,000, and the second a bond of $859.20; the first being dated January 28, 1881, and the second December 15, 1881.

The defendant, McGowan, answered, claiming a homestead in 42 acres of the tract, which was in excess of the two hundred, acres mortgaged, and which he claimed was not embraced in the mortgages, but was left out as his homestead. He also alleged that the land formerly belonged to his father, William McGowan, deceased, in whose will one-fourth interest in said land was devised to his daughter, Elizabeth, now Mrs. Strain, the defendant, McGowan, being the executor of the will and trustee of the said Elizabeth, and that no partition had been made among the devisees, four in number, including the said defendant, each being entitled to one-fourth interest; that in 1880 the said Elizabeth obtained a decree against said defendant, ordering him to convey, to her her portion of said land, and to pay to her by a certain day the sum of $1,000, and upon so doing to be discharged of his trust; which order and decree had never been complied with, of which facts the plaintiff had notice when the mortgages were executed. Wherefore he prayed that all encumbrancers be called in, and that Elizabeth Strain’s claim be declared to be the first lien upon the land, and that the said 42 acres be. adjudged to defendant as his homestead.

[77]*77Mrs. Strain came in, setting up the decree mentioned for $1,000, said decree being dated , 1880. And also two judgment creditors came in, to wit, the Atlantic & Virginia Fertilizing Company, with a judgment for $65.15, obtained June 13, 1882, and costs, $20; and O. D. Barksdale, with judgment for $79.60, and costs, $29.40, obtained February 26, 1885.

The case was referred to a special master to hear the issues of law and fact, and to report his findings of fact and conclusions of law, with leave to report any special matter. His findings of fact and conclusions of law were presented to the court in an elaborate report (found in the “Case”), in which he held that the Strain decree had not acquired a lien because of defective entry; that the plaintiff had no notice of said decree; that the defendant, John T. McGowan, was not entitled to the homestead claimed; that the mortgages should be foreclosed, and that the proceeds should be applied, 1st, to said mortgages; 2nd, to the Virginia Fertilizing Company judgment; 3rd, to the Strain decree; and, 4th, to the Barksdale judgment.

This report, upon exceptions, was confirmed by his honor, Judge Pressley, who, holding with the master that the 42 acres were included in the mortgage, denied the homestead, and held that although the Strain decree was a final judgment, and might take rank in the distribution of assets of a deceased from the date of filing, yet that it could not have lien on real estate until the date at which it was “entered” according to the statute. He held, therefore, that it was postponed to the other judgment liens, and he ordered the land to be sold, the proceeds to be applied to plaintiff’s mortgages, then to the Virginia Fertilizing Company’s judgment, then to the Strain decree, and, lastly, to the Barks-dale judgment, according to the findings of the master, as to the date of “entry” of these different' liens.

The defendants, McGowan and Mrs. Strain, contest this decree — the first on the ground that his homestead was denied him, and the second because the decree in her favor was held invalid as to its lien on the land on account of the alleged defects in its “entry”; also, because his honor should have held that the plaintiff had notice of said decree before the execution of the mortgages ; and further, that the land in question was subject to the [78]*78trust of Mrs. Strain under her father’s will, and bound, therefore, for the payment of the said decree; also, that it was bound, as in cases of partition.

We see no reason to disturb the finding of the master, concurred in by the Circuit Judge, as to the 42 acres claimed by defendant, McGowan, as a homestead. This portion of the land was within the boundaries described in both mortgages, and there was no distinct reservation in either. We think the mortgages included the entire tract — certainly the second one did — and a homestead cannot now be carved out as against the liens imposed by said mortgages. The execution of a mortgage excludes the homestead, so far, at least, as the debt intended to be secured is concerned.

Neither can we overrule the finding below as to absence of notice on the part of the plaintiff of the Strain decree. This finding is not without evidence to sustain it, and under the rule in such cases it must stand as one of the established facts in the case.

One of the important questions in the appeal is whether the “entry” of the Strain decree was so defective as to prevent its lien on the land in priority to the mortgages of plaintiff and the judgment of the Virginia Fertilizing Company, as held by the Circuit Judge. The facts, as found, are that the decree was a decree in equity, obtained on November 5, 1880, in an action against John T. McGowan, as executor of William McGowan, deceased, and as trustee of Elizabeth Strain, to enforce her rights under the will of said William McGowan, her father, and to set aside the trust as executed. This decree was filed by the clerk on November 5, 1880. It was, however, not entered, enrolled, nor indexed at that time, but was thrown in a desk in the clerk’s office, where it was found by G. W. Shell, successor, in April, 1884, who, about February, 1885, enrolled, indexed, and entered it; that the book of Abstract of Judgments shows only the date of the filing of the summons and complaint, and gives no information as to the date of entry, the date of the judgment or relief, but simply shows the date of the filing of the summons and complaint and the parties to the action.

It is hardly necessary to say that this was not sufficient to give a judgment lien on real estate under the statutes upon that subject. Section 313 of the Code (now section 310), of force when [79]*79this decree was pronounced, read: “Final judgments hereafter entered in any court of record in this State shall constitute a lien on real estate. * * * ” What is entry? “The clerk shall keep among the records of the court a book for the entry of judgments, to be called the judgment book.” Sec. 300. “The judgment shall be entered in the judgment book, and shall specify clearly the relief granted, or other determination of the action.” In substance now section 301. “The lien is only created by the entry.” DeSaussure v. Zeigler, 6 S. C., 13. Here nothing seems to have been done before 1885, except to mark the decree filed, when it was pronounced in November, 1880, it being at the same time deposited 'in a desk in the clerk’s office, where it was found by the successor of the then clerk in 1884.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 215, 28 S.C. 74, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-mcgowan-sc-1888.