Witte v. Wolfe

16 S.C. 256, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 19, 1881
DocketCASE No. 1116
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 S.C. 256 (Witte v. Wolfe) 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
Witte v. Wolfe, 16 S.C. 256, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 153 (S.C. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McGowan, A. J.

On February 23d, 1874, Saling Wolfe and Sarah S. Wolfe, his wife, of Winnsboro, Fairfield county, executed to the plaintiffs their joint and several bond in the penalty of $12,000, conditioned for the performance of covenants, viz.: To pay $6,000 on the first of January then next, with interest thereon from date of advancement at the rate of one per cent, per month, “ and ship to them for sale, on commissions of two and one-half per cent., 375 bales of cotton before said first day of January next, and pay also to said Witte Brothers any balance that may be due to them on any transaction in buying and selling cotton or otherwise on said first day of January next, without fraud or further delay,” &c. This bond, which, in the case, is called Exhibit A., was secured by a mortgage of real estate belonging to both Saling Wolfe and Sarah S. Wolfe, as follows: The Avick place, containing 100 acres; the Shurley place, containing 317 acres; the Weston place, containing 850 acres, and the Delleney place, containing 940 acres, belonging to Saling Wolfe; and the following four parcels, viz.: The Shaw place, containing 237 acres; the Vann place, containing 140 acres; the Leitner place, containing 100 acres, and the town lots in Winnsboro, belonging to the separate estate of Sarah S. Wolfe. The business did not stop at the amount secured by the bond, but during the year 1874 the plaintiffs advanced the sum $97,342.97, and they sold cotton for defendants which amounted to $87,097.37; this left a balance due at the maturity of the bond of $10,245.60. But reducing this by the sales of cotton, up to February 15th, 1875, there was then due $5,567.62, which was admitted by Saling Wolfe.

On December 31st, 1874, the business of that year had not been closed up, but it was known there would be a balance against Saling Wolfe and Sarah S. Wolfe, and on that day they executed to plaintiffs another joint and several bond in the penalty of $16,000, with the following conditions: “That if the above-bound Saling Wolfe, his heirs, executors and administrators, shall and do well and truly pay or cause to be paid unto the above-named Witte'Brothers * * * the full and [265]*265just sum of $8,000 ou the first day of January A. D. 1876, with interest thereon, as the same may be advanced by the said Witte Brothers to the said Saling Wolfe, from the dates of the advancements respectively, at the rate of one per cent, per month, computed by way of discount; and shall ship during the year 1875 to the said Witte Brothers 500 bales of cotton, to be sold by them on commission of two and one-half per cent.; and shall also pay to the said Witte Brothers, on the said first day of January, 1876, any balance that may be due by him on any transactions in buying or selling cotton prior to said date last given, without fraud or further delay,” &c. To secure this bond, which is known as Exhibit J3.) a mortgage was executed by them upon the same real estate as secured the first bond.

On February 15th, 1875, Saling and Sarah S. Wolfe executed to plaintiffs another joint and several bond conditioned for the payment of $4,000 and interest, and the shipment of 200 bales of cotton on or before January 1st, 1876. This bond was secured by a mortgage of certain chattels, horses, mules, wagons, &c., purporting to belong to both Saling and Sarah S. Wolfe, but which belonged alone to Sarah S. This bond, which is known as Exhibit C., was also secured by an agricultural lien of even date given by both Wolfe and his wife. Under the security of these two bonds and mortgages last named, and the agricultural lien of 1875, the plaintiffs advanced during that year to the amount of $21,635.35, and cotton was delivered which paid the amount, except the sum of $3,853.88. These sums, with interest, were claimed by the plaintiffs in their first cause of action to be covered by the mortgage of which they prayed foreclosure and sale of the property.

On January 7th, 1876, Saling Wolfe and Sarah S. Wolfe' executed an agricultural lien to secure further advances,' and on February 21st, 1877, Saling Wolfe alone executed another agricultural lien to secure further advances, and on May 13th, 1878, he executed a mortgage on his crops of that year, and April 30th, 1879, another mortgage on the crops of that year, the last expressly for the purpose of further securing the past indebtedness. The balance due on these securities was claimed in the [266]*266second cause of action as a debt against Saling Wolfe and wife, but not secured by mortgage.

An action was brought by Sarah S. Wolfe against Witte Brothers to cancel the bond and chattel mortgage (7., upon the ground that cotton, to wit, 134 bales, shipped under lien of February 15th, which provided that cotton shipped under that lien was to be applied to the payment of the bond secured by the chattel mortgage, should be so applied to the extinguishment of said bond and mortgage.

The defendants, Saling Wolfe, Sarah S. Wolfe and Simon Baruch, trustee, resisted the recovery, and insisted that Mrs. Wolfe signed the several bonds and mortgages only as security for her husband, and that being a married woman she had not legal capacity to bind herself by such a contract, and, consequently, the bonds and mortgages, so far as she was concerned, were void and her separate property not liable. And even if she was originally bound as surety, that the course of dealing between the plaintiffs and her principal, especially in so largely exceeding the business indicated by the amounts of the bonds and mortgáges, not only released her as surety, but, in effect, paid and discharged entirely the bonds and mortgages as securities. If not that, she was discharged by new agreements between her principal and' plaintiffs, and, in any view, that the defendants were entitled to a credit for the $4,000 bond secured byvthe chattel mortgage, to which the cotton shipped should be first applied, and, if so applied, said bond was paid in full and should be eliminated from the account.

It was referred to a referee to take the testimony and state the accounts. He took much evidence, and stated the accounts substantially as related in the foregoing meagre outlines. He reported as due upon the several bonds secured by mortgage of Saling Wolfe and wife, the aggregate amount of $11,929.90; that there was due by them also upon the lien of 1876, $1,232.90, and by Saling Wolfe alone, on lien executed by him February 21st, 1877, the sum of $206.27.

The case came up before Judge Hudson on exceptions. At the same term of the court the case of Sarah S.‘Wolfe against Witte Brothers, to cancel the bond and chattel mortgage, was [267]*267tried. The judge decreed that the bond C. and chattel mortgage were, in effect, paid by the cotton which had been delivered by Saling Wolfe. In this case he confirmed the report of the referee in every respect, except as to the application of the proceeds of certain cotton, and as to that he made a small change, which he thought was made proper by the aforesaid decision in the matter of the bond and chattel mortgage, to which item more particular reference will be made hereafter. He held that the bonds and mortgages were not discharged; that Mrs. Wolfe, as well as her husband, was liable for the amount of $12,091.13, covered by the mortgages, for which he gave judgment, and ordered foreclosure by sale of all the lands embraced in them, and he also decreed against them both the sum of $1,232.85, due under lien of January 7th, 1876, but not secured.

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Related

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126 S.E. 29 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.C. 256, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witte-v-wolfe-sc-1881.