12 S.E. 912 | N.C. | 1891
The facts, extracted from the report of the referee, presented on appeal, were as follows:
1. On 24 March, 1876, B. S. Atkinson was indebted to Rountree Co., in the sum of $621.63, which amount was evidenced by one promissory note and secured by a mortgage upon the lands mentioned in the complaint.
2. Afterward, and before 1882, the note and mortgage were assigned to defendant Stancill. *108
3. On 28 February, 1882, Atkinson was indebted to said Stancill in the amount of the note assigned to him, and various other amounts by note or account, and that on said day Atkinson and defendant came to a settlement and ascertainment of the debts due from him to defendant Stancill, and then executed his promissory note under seal, payable to Stancill, for the amount of $2,119.11, which amount included the Rountree note, with interest to that date, and some additional amounts due Stancill.
4. Stancill accepted said note in full satisfaction of and in payment of and in discharge of said Rountree Co.'s note and other indebtedness, and from that time used said note as collateral, and has treated it as a discharge of preexisting securities.
This action was brought to restrain the defendant from selling under the mortgage and for an account, etc.
From the judgment of the court overruling the exception to that (155) part of the report which held the mortgage to be extinguished by the acceptance of the new note the defendant appealed.
In the well-considered case of Battle v. Mayo,
The only exception insisted upon is addressed to the finding of law that "the note to Rountree Co. was, by the transactions between the said Atkinson and the defendant, released and discharged, and the security thereunder lost." The foregoing legal conclusion is based upon the following findings of fact by the referee:
"I find that, on 28 February, 1882, said B. S. Atkinson was indebted to said G. A. Stancill in the amount of the note assigned to him, and various other amounts by note or account, and that on said day the said Atkinson and defendant same to a settlement and ascertainment of the debts due from Atkinson to defendant Stancill, and on that day said Atkinson executed his promissory note, under seal, payable to Stancill for amount of $2,119.11, which amount included the amount of the Rountree note, with interest to that date, with some additional amounts due *109 Stancill on account of his (Stancill's) tenant, for which he (156) became responsible. I find that defendant G. A. Stancill accepted said note in full satisfaction of and in discharge of said Rountree Co.'s note and other indebtedness, and from that time until now he has used said note as collateral and has treated it as a discharge of preexisting securities."
It is well settled that a mortgage may be discharged by matter in pais,Faw v. Whittington,
Under the findings of fact, which we are precluded from reviewing, we must affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.
Cited: Tilley v. Bivens,
(157)