Wilbur v. Smith

2 S.E. 612, 26 S.C. 331, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 19, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 612 (Wilbur v. Smith) 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
Wilbur v. Smith, 2 S.E. 612, 26 S.C. 331, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 82 (S.C. 1887).

Opinion

The opinion of the court wras delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

In September, 1884, William Knobeloch, as executor, leased to one William McComb two stores in Meeting street, Charleston, at the yearly rent of $1,300, [332]*332payable monthly. There was some delay in collecting the rent, and in April, 1885, the sum of $650 was due for rent in arrear. On April 8, 1885, the said McComb executed a mortgage of the stock of goods in the leased stores to F. J. Smith, trustee, for the purpose of securing certain promissory notes which he had given; and a few days thereafter, viz., on April 11, the said Smith, as mortgagee, claiming that the condition of the mortgage was broken, entered upon the premises, and took possession of the goods, the mortgaged property, and advertised it for sale, but did not remove it from the premises. On April 22, 1885, Knobeloeh, the landlord, issued his distress warrant in writing and under seal, but without affidavit, to one E. F. Schachte, his agent, who was not a sworn constable or other official, who levied a distress upon the stock of goods still in the stores, and finding that F. J. Smith claimed to be in legal possession, he merely remained in a sort of joint possession with Smith’s employees.

Soon after, other creditors of McComb instituted an action, Theodore A. Wilbur v. Frederick J. Smith, et al., to set aside the mortgage as being fraudulent and void, and really an assignment giving preferences in violation of section 2014 of the General Statutes. The mortgagee, Smith, answered, denying the allegations, and Knobeloch presented his claim for rent under his distress warrant as stated. An order of court was taken that the mortgagee should sell the property, the rights of all parties to be transferred to the fund; and then that action was compromised and discontinued, leaving in the court money sufficient to pay the claim of Knobeloch for rent, if it should be established.

The claim was presented and argued before Judge Wallace, who disallowed it; and Knobeloch, the landlord, appeals upon the grounds following: “I. Because it was error in the presiding judge to dismiss the petition of appellant. II. Because his hon- or erred in not holding that the distress levied was lawful and valid. III. Because his honor erred in not holding that the stock of goods mentioned in the petition, upon which the distress was levied, was, while on the premises of the landlord, subject to such levy, and that a lien in favor of the petitioner was by said levy created prior in rank to that of the mortgagee. IV. Because his honor erred in not decreeing that the petitioner, appel[333]*333lant, had, under the facts of the case, a lien for rent on the stock of goods, and in not decreeing that the said petitioner, appellant, be paid the amount of said rent and costs out of the proceeds of sale of the stock of goods,” &c.

The main question in the case is, whether, under our law, the stock of goods in ..the possession of Smith, the mortgagee, after condition of the mortgage broken, although still remaining on the demised premises, was, on April 22, 1885, liable to be dis-trained by the landlord for rent in arrear. We derived our law of distress for rent from England, where rent for the use and occupation of land is a highly favored claim. It is manifest that the whole law upon the subject was framed in the interest of the landlord. .The right is nowhere expressly given by statute, but it comes from the common law, which allowed the landlord, without the sanction of legal process, to issue his own warrant of distress, and deliver it to his bailiff, with authority to summarily seize all the goods and chattels, with certain known exceptions, which could be found on the demised premises, whether they belonged to the tenant or a stranger. This great power was defined, protected, and enlarged by certain statutory provisions, and notably by a statute “for the better security of rents, and to prevent frauds committed by tenants,” which was made of force in this State (2 Stat., 547), and generally known as the statute of Anne, which, among other things, provided that if the tenant fraudulently removed his goods from the premises to escape distress, the landlord, within five days, might follow and seize them under his warrant; “provided that nothing within this act contained shell extend or be construed to extend to empower such lessor or landlord to take or seize any goods or chattels as a distress for arrears of rent, which shall be sold Iona fide and for a valuable consideration before such seizure made.”

For a period, no part of the law of distress was of force in this State, having been repealed by the sweeping words of section 20 of the attachment act of 1868, which declared that “distress for non-payment of rent as heretofore existing is abolished.” 14 . Stat., 106. But in June, 1877, the law of distress was re-enacted in terms well-nigh as sweeping and general as those of the. repeal, viz., “That the first ten words of section 20 of an ‘act to [334]*334regulate attachments,’ approved September 4, 1868, be stricken out, and the rights and remedies in such cases, existing before the passage of said act, are hereby restored.” 16 Stat, 265. The effect of this was to bring back the law as it stood in 1868. Mobley v. Dent, 10 S. C., 474.

In 1878 a more formal act was passed: “To restore the remedy of distress for rent,” which not only repeated the repealing'act of 1877, but went further, and affirmatively declared as follows: “And the said act, entitled ‘an act for the better security of rents and to prevent frauds committed by tenants’ (Anne) is hereby re-enacted and made of force in this State. Provided, that no property shall be seized under a distress warrant for rent except such as belongs to the tenant in his own right.” 16 Stat., 511. In 1882 the general statutes expressly re-enacted the provisions of the aforesaid statute of Anne — setting them out in full in sections 1824 and 1825, and then follows section 1826, in these words: “Nothing herein contained shall extend, or be construed to extend, to empower such lessor or landlord to take or seize any goods or chattels as a distress for arrears of rent which shall be sold bona fide and for a valuable consideration before such seizure made; and no property shall be seized under a distress warrant for rent, except such as belongs to the tenant in his own right.”

In this state of the law, it is strongly urged for the appellant that the above section of the general statutes (1826), having in it the very words of the proviso to the statute of Anne, must be construed to be nothing more than a proviso to that statute, and as that deals alone with property removed from the premises, the proviso must also be limited to property so removed, and does not apply to that which remained on the premises. This is most certainly a new view, and we must say an ingenious one. It is true the important words of section 1826, General Statutes, down to those italicized as quoted above, and ending with the words,, “seizure made,” are identical with those of the proviso of the statute of Anne, and doubtless the draftsman had the proviso before him when he framed that section. It cannot, however, escape observation, that the provision is neither stated as a proviso, nor makes any reference whatever to that statute, but ap-\ [335]*335pears as part of a distinct and independent section of the general statutes of the State.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 612, 26 S.C. 331, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-v-smith-sc-1887.