38 S.C. 496 | S.C. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to foreclose a mortgage of real estate, executed on the 12th of February, 1879, by one James Bobertson to the plaintiff. The mortgagor, James Bobertson, having departed this life intestate some time' in the year 1882, and his widow, Sarah A., having subsequently intermarried with one William B. Plyler, the action is against her and her children as heirs at law of the mortgagor, with whom is joined one Peter L. Threatt, who is in possession of and claims title to ten acres of the laud covered by the mortgage; and his claim having been allowed by the Circuit decree, which is not appealed from as to that claim, the only controversy here is as to the defence set up by the appellant, Sarah A. Plyler, Her defence is title to the mortgaged premises, paramount to the mortgage, derived under a deed to her from her former husband, James Bobertson, executed on the 14th of November, 1877, and duly recorded on the 8th of December, 1877, prior to the execution of the mortgage. To this plaintiff replied that said deed was fraudulent and void, and appellant rejoins that-plaintiff is barred by the statute of limitations from assailing said deed for fraud.
The case was referred to a referee to determine all the issues both of law and fact, and he made his report, finding, amongst other things, as matter of fact, that the deed from James Bobertson to his wife, the appellant, was without consideration, and was made with a fraudulent intent, and, as a matter of law, that said deed was null and void, and, therefore, constituted no defence to this action; and as he overruled the defence of the statute of limitations, he recommended that the plaintiff have judgment of foreclosure, except as to the ten acres claimed by the defendant, Peter L. Threatt. To this report the appellant filed numerous exceptions, all of which were overruled by the Circuit Judge, who rendered judgment for foreclosure as recommended by the referee.
From this judgment the defendant, Sarah A. Plyler, appeals upon the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be repeated here, as they make substantially only the following questions: 1st. Whether the deed from James Bobertson to the
The plaintiff here having established his cause of action, as set forth in his complaint, by proving the executon of the note and mortgage, was entitled to j udgment of foreclosure, unless the appellant succeeded in establishing her title paramount to the mortgage. For this purpose she relied upon the deed in question, and, therefore, the only remaining question was whether such deed was sufficient to vest the title in her; and surely the plaintiff was at liberty to show any defect in that deed which would render it insufficient to vest such title in appellant, either by showing that it was a forgery, or that it was obtained by duress or any other fatal defect; and if so, why should not the plaintiff be allowed to show that it was void for fraud, and, therefore, incapable of vesting the title in appellant, and thus insufficient to sustain the defence relied on. It must be remembered that the statute of limitations does not even purport to destroy or extinguish a cause of action, but simply to close the doors of the courts to a suitor who undertakes to bring his suit upon such cause, of action after the lapse of the prescribed time. Hence it has been held in Wilson v. Kelly, 16 S. C., 216, that while a holder of a note may have lost his right of action for the breach of the contract evidenced by the note, by reason of the lapse of the prescribed time, yet if he can obtain payment in any other way than by resort to an action on such contract, he has the right so to do. So here the statute does not have the effect of converting a fraudulent deed into a valid deed, by reason of the lapse of the prescribed time, but it simply forbids the right of action for relief on the ground of fraud; and hence, if the question as to the fraudulency of the deed arises in any other way than in such an action, there is nothing in the statute which forbids its being assailed for fraud. It seems to us that the case of Amaker v. New, 33 S. C., 35, supra, is so entirely conclusive of this question that we need not consider it further.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.