58 S.E. 804 | S.C. | 1907
Lead Opinion
September 17, 1907. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiffs, as part of the heirs-at-law of Anthony Francis, deceased, brought this action against the other heirs-at-law and C.O. Witte, Arthur Lynah and Edward H. Sparkman, for the partition of a certain tract of land, which they allege said Anthony Francis owned at the time of his death, a portion of which is in the possession of the said C.O. Witte, Arthur Lynah and Edward H. Sparkman, in which they claim some interest as trustees.
The defendants, C.O. Witte, Arthur Lynah and Edward H. Sparkman, as trustees, answered, denying the allegations of the complaint except that they were in possession, alleged ownership of the premises described in fee simple, pleaded the statute of limitations, and further answering, set up the defense of purchasers from C.E. Salinas et al. for value without notice of any existing equities in favor of the late Anthony Francis or his heirs-at-law in or to said premises, and that their grantors, C.E. Salinas et al., were likewise purchasers for value without notice of the said existing equities.
The pleadings having raised the issue of title, trial was begun before a jury. It appears that the tract of land in question was conveyed to Anthony Francis by deed dated December 5th, 1872, and it was conveyed by Francis to Louis Loyns by deed absolute in form, dated December 30th, 1873, that the said Francis was in possession until his death in 1876 and his heirs-at-law until 1883 or 1884, when Louis Loyns went into possession. The land in question was mortgaged by Louis Loyns to A.J. Salinas Sons January 29, 1891, was sold under foreclosure proceedings to C. Edward Salinas March 7th, 1892, and was conveyed by deed of trust dated January 15th, 1905, to C.O. Witte, Arthur Lynah and Edward H. Sparkman, trustees. *181
Plaintiff offered in evidence bond for title by Loyns to Francis bearing same date as conveyance to Loyns and sought to show that these papers were intended as a mortgage, and also offered testimony to show admission by Loyns of payment before he took possession and during the life-time of Francis. This testimony was received subject to objection and was afterwards ruled out as incompetent under the pleadings, and this ruling is the basis of the second, third and fourth exceptions.
At the close of plaintiff's testimony defendant's attorney moved for a direction of verdict "on the ground that the heirs of Anthony Francis having shown title out of their ancestor and traced title into the defendants Witte, Sparkman and Lynah, that they occupied the position of mortgagees in possession and cannot be disturbed, unless it could be shown that the mortgage was paid before the original mortgagee went into possession of the land." The Court having held that the declaration of Louis Loyns, said to have been made in 1875, as to payment of the debt due Loyns before possession was taken by him was not competent or admissible against defendants C.O. Witte, Arthur Lynah and Edward Sparkman, under the pleadings in this action, concluded there was no competent evidence to submit to the jury and dismissed the complaint, from which plaintiffs appeal.
The first exception makes the point that the Court erred in deciding that defendants Witte, Lynah and Sparkman occupied the position of mortgagees in possession. The ruling is correct if the deed of Francis to Loyns and the collateral agreement to reconvey by Loyns to Francis constitute a mortgage and if Witte, Lynah and Sparkman are subject to the equities existing between the original parties. Whether such a transaction is a mortgage or a conditional sale must be determined by the intent of the parties as clearly established by the attending facts and circumstances. The most general test is whether the debt continued or was discharged by the conveyance. *182 Watkins v. Williams (N.C.),
Assuming then that respondents are in possession affected with notice, they would be subrogated to all the rights of their grantor, Loyns, as mortgagees in possession. Loyns took possession of the land in 1884 or 1885, after the repeal of the proviso of the act of 1791 by statute of December 18, 1879, and the fact that the mortgage was executed before said repeal would not operate to prevent the right, if any, of the heirs of Francis to redeem. Sims v. Steadman,
The complaint, however, contains no allegations that the papers in question constitute a mortgage, nor that said mortgage had been paid, nor that the conditions of the contract to reconvey had been performed, nor that respondents are in possession with notice of appellants' equity, and the Court was not called upon to consider whether any amendment to the complaint could or should be made to this end. The action being for partition, and under the issue of paramount title in respondents, the appellants having shown lawful possession in respondents, it was not error to dismiss the complaint. Shiver v. Arthur,
In view of the character of the action as disclosed by the pleadings, it must also follow that no error was committed in excluding the testimony sought to be introduced and in holding that there was no competent testimony to sustain the action.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I am unable to resist the conclusion that in the opinion of the Court too much importance is attached to the form of the action. The deed from Francis to Loyns and the obligation of Loyns to reconvey, taken together, constituted a mortgage, or at least a contract in the nature of a mortgage. These papers having been duly recorded, all subsequent purchasers from Loyns were charged with notice of them and their legal effect. If the debt was paid before Loyns, the original mortgagee, took possession, then there was no debt and no mortgage when Salinas and his grantees, Witte, Lynah and Sparkman, took possession, and they could not hold as mortgagees in possession against the plaintiffs.
Evidence of payment in full of the mortgage debt to Loyns was therefore competent to show there was no mortgage, *184 and hence no mortgagees in possession. One of the witnesses testified, Francis, the mortgagor, and Loyns, the mortgagee, had made a full settlement, Loyns saying to Francis: "That is all right; come back Monday and get your papers."
If the mortgage was paid, then the plaintiffs as heirs of the mortgagor out of possession were entitled to recover the possession from the defendants unlawfully holding possession under a mortgage no longer having any existence. The fact that the mortgage consisted of two papers, the deed, absolute in form, and the separate agreement of the mortgagee to reconvey, instead of the usual single paper in form, an absolute conveyance with the condition of becoming a nullity on payment, should make no difference. McCreary
v. Coggeshall,
For these reasons, I think the evidence as to the payment of the debt to Loyns was competent and the Circuit Judge was in error in directing a verdict for the defendants.