Southern Trust Company v. Cudd

164 S.E. 428, 166 S.C. 108, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 4, 1932
Docket13422
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 164 S.E. 428 (Southern Trust Company v. Cudd) 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
Southern Trust Company v. Cudd, 164 S.E. 428, 166 S.C. 108, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 123 (S.C. 1932).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Associate Justice W. C. Cothran.

In the consideration of this case we are forcibly impressed with a statement made by the late Chief Justice Gary to the effect that the trial of cases by affidavits alone is always most unsatisfactory.

Here we have the suit brought by Southern Trust Company against J. J. Cudd asking judgment upon certain notes aggregating $2,834.65; the suit being commenced on January 16, 1932. The suit was framed as a creditor’s bill, being brought on behalf of the plaintiff and all other creditors of the defendant who may come in and contribute to the expenses of this action. A receiver pendente lite was asked, and a rule to show cause was obtained from Judge Sease. The defendant made answer to the complaint and return to the rule to show cause, admitting by his answer the debt due the plaintiff and denying in his return the necessity for the appointment of a receiver. After hearing argument, Judge Sease granted the motion for the appointment of a receiver, fixed his bond, and prescribed his duties. From this order the defendant has appealed, and the sole question before this Court is whether or not there was error on the part of Judge Sease in appointing a receiver.

After alleging its debt, made up of various items, the plaintiff in its complaint then proceeds to set forth the grounds upon which it asks for a receiver. Paragraphs 3 and 5, quoted below, set forth the main contentions of the plaintiff, and they are as follows :

“3. That upon information and belief, in addition to this plaintiff, the defendant J. J. Cudd is heavily indebted to numerous other creditors, who are pressing the payment of their obligations, and either already have, or are now con *111 templating the institution of legal proceedings in an attempt to secure judgments against the said defendant; that the said defendant, according to this plaintiff’s present best information and belief, is insolvent and a fair value of his assets is wholly insufficient to liquidate and pay off his said debts and obligations; that all creditors know or should have reasonable cause to believe now that the said defendant is insolvent; that unless the institution of such actions can be restrained herein and all creditors protected by the appointment of a receiver, such creditors as may the more speedily institute their said action and procure their judgments will be enabled thereby to procure illegal preferences in the payment of their debts over other creditors of like rank and priority and in contravention of the provisions of Sections 5511, 5512 and 5513 of the Civil Code of South Carolina (1922), commonly known as the Assignment Statutes, and the necessary and inevitable result of such creditors recovering and obtaining judgments against the said defendant, as the defendant knows, and as the creditors themselves know, or have reasonable cause to believe, and obtaining payment of said judgments through executions is that such creditors are thereby enabled to obtain a preference over other creditors of said defendant, contrary to law.”
“5. That the defendant J. J. Cudd is the owner of considerable property, consisting both of farm land and of improved city property, and that the sale of such property under an execution sale would be to sacrifice the same and dispose of the same at a gross under-valuation, and thus the property to which all creditors alike must look for the payment of their obligations would be sacrificed to the great detriment of all creditors, if the same were sold under an execution sale, and such procedure would operate as a wasteful dissipation of the properties of the said defendant, and would enable such creditors as might satisfy their obligations through the said procedure to obtain, as alleged above, an illegal preference in the payment of their obliga *112 tions; and that it is to the advantage and for the benefit of all creditors of said defendant, and that it is necessary in order to preserve and properly protect the said properties, that a receiver be appointed for the properties of the defendant, to the end that the same may be protected and preserved for all creditors alike, and that illegal preferences on the part of any creditors may be prevented, and that such properties may be sold in an orderly fashion at such time or times as may appear advantageous through a receiver of this Court instead of through the over-speedy method common to execution sales, especially since sales of real estate at this time during the present economic depression could not result other than in a gross sacrifice at a highly under-valued price of properties of great value.”

In addition to this, the plaintiff alleges that a tract of land, very valuable, has recently been conveyed by the defendant to Furnace Land Company for the sum of $2,000.00, and that Furnace Land Company is a corporation owned by the defendant and his wife as sole stockholders. It further alleges the existence and record of certain real estate mortgages made by the defendant, aggregating at least $29,-500.00, and that judgments were entered against the defendant in a considerable amount, the return of the defendant showing that these judgments amounted to nearly $2,-000.00. Debts of upward of $40,000.00 were thereby set out in the complaint. There was no allegation in the complaint as to what property was owned by the defendant; the complaint merely stating that, upon information and belief, the defendant was insolvent.

The answer and return of the defendant admitted the debt due the plaintiff. Full details were gone into relative to the debts. Denial was made of the allegations that the defendant was insolvent; that he was being pressed by his creditors; that a receiver was necessary; or that the defendant was guilty of any fraud, unlawful preference, or other unlawful conduct. Allegations were also made as to the de *113 sire of the plaintiff and of its parent, the First National Bank, the president of both institutions being the same person, to harass and oppress the defendant. The allegation was also made that the land conveyed to Furnace Land Company was mortgaged beyond its present value.

The very important statement was made in the return that the defendant had property valued at upwards of $800,-000.00, and that his direct debts were not half of this amount.

Had testimony been taken much more light could have been shed upon this controversy, but we are forced to decide the issues upon verified pleadings and a few affidavits, which, as stated at the outset of this opinion, is a most unsatisfactory way to determine causes.

‘Before entering into a further discussion of this appeal, we may say that we fail to grasp the eagerness of the plaintiff for the appointment of a receiver. Its debt of less than $3,000.00 was admitted by the answer, and judgment at once could have been taken on the pleadings. Execution could have long since been issued, and the plaintiff could have realized its debt out of the property of the defendant, which, according to the uncontradicted return of the defendant, is worth vastly more than all indebtedness.

Section 584, Code of 1932, sets forth the five grounds for the appointment of receivers and the fifth is the only one applicable to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.E. 428, 166 S.C. 108, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-trust-company-v-cudd-sc-1932.