35 S.C. 511 | S.C. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the 22nd day of January, 1876, the defendant, M. J. Blackwell, executed his deed, in the ordinary form of an absolute conveyance, to the plaintiff, whereby he conveyed to him a certain tract of land iri the County of Clarendon, more particularly described in said deed. On. the same day the plaintiff executed a paper, in the form of a receipt, not under seal, whereby he acknowledged the receipt of the title to said tract of land from the defendant, M. J. Blackwell, which he admits was conveyed to him “as collateral security for the payment of any and all demands which I may now and hereafter have against the aforesaid M. J. Blackwell. Said titles to be null and void and land reconveyed if said amounts are duly paid by the 1st January, 1877, otherwise the titles herein described to be forfeited or land sold and all above the amount and cost due to revert to the aforesaid M. J. Blackwell, his heirs or assigns.”
It seems from the testimony, that the parties continued their dealings with each other for several years after the 1st of January, 1877, and the parties never having come to any final settlement of their affairs, the plaintiff, some time in July, 1888, commenced this action to recover possession of the said tract of land. The defendant, M. J. Blackwell, answered, setting up two defences : First, a general denial of all the allegations contained in the complaint. Second, that the deed above referred to, though absolute in form, was intended merely as security for the payment of his account to the plaintiff for the year 1875, and such further indebtedness as he might incur up to the 10th of October, 1876; that such indebtedness amounted at that date to the sum of $246.81, which he is willing to pay, but is unable to raise the money for that purpose as long as plaintiff holds the legal title and claims to be the owner in fee of the premises, and denies that there is any other indebtedness intended to be secured by said deed. On the 27th of February, 1891, an order was entered by consent, declaring that the said deed was intended as a mortgage, and directing “That it be referred to the clerk of this court to take an accounting and ascertain what sum is due, if any, by M.
From this judgment the defendant, M. J. Blackwell, appeals upon the following grounds: “First. It was error in the Circuit Judge not to sustain the exceptions to the referee’s report. Second. His honor, the Circuit Judge, erred in his apprehension of the fact which led to his conclusion, ‘that it ivas the intention of the parties to the deed, evidenced by the long course of dealing between them, and the surrounding circumstances, that all indebtedness which might be contracted by the defendant, M. J. Blackwell, with plaintiff after the execution of said deed, should be thereby secured.’ Third. It was error in apprehension of the facts which led his honor to conclude ‘that there are, also, arising from the testimony, good grounds to conclude that if the deed was not originally intended to secure any debt contracted after the 1st of January, 1877, the parties to it have extended its lien to subsequent indebtedness.’ Fourth. It was error in law in the Circuit Judge to conclude ‘that if the deed was not originally intended to secure any debt contracted after the first of January, 1877,’ the parties to it could, by parol, change or alter its original intent, and extend its lien by parol to subsequent indebtedness not contemplated at the time of its execution.”
The reason for the distinction is this: When a mortgagee, holding a formal, legal mortgage, undertakes to enforce his rights thereunder, he is proceeding to enforce rights resting in contract, and hence he is confined to the terms of the contract as agreed upon by the parties at the time the contract was entered into in the solemn form of a mortgage. He cannot, therefore, be permitted to show that his mortgage, which was originally intended to secure one debt, has, by a subsequent parol agreement, been so extended as to cover another debt not contemplated by the parties at the time the contract which he is seeking to enforce was entered into. But where, as in this case, one who holds the legal title to a tract of land, under an absolute conveyance, is seeking to enforce his legal rights thereunder, is met by a showing on the part of his grantor, that although he holds the legal title, equity will not permit him to enforce it, because at the time it was executed such paper was not intended to operate as an absolute conveyance, but was intended merely as a security for the payment of a debt, and hence if the paper were allowed the effect of an absolute conveyance, it would operate as a fraud; it is not a question of contract, but one of pure equity ; and the maxim, that he who seeks equity must himself do equity applies, and hence one who invokes the aid of equity as a protection against the holder of the legal title, will be required to pay not only the debt which the absolute conveyance was intended to secure, but also whatever else he may owe the holder of such title. Walling v. Aiken, McMull. Eq., 1; Lake v. Shumate, supra.
It seems to us, therefore, that whether there was or was not an agreement between the parties to extend the security of the conveyance to debts other than those originally contemplated, was an immaterial inquiry in this case,' and that in any view of the matter, the judgment appealed from is not erroneous.