This аppeal involves whether a landlord has priority to possession of a mobile home over a purchase money security interest holdеr. The circuit court held the purchase money in
FACTS
On November 13, 1986, Lawrence Pruitt and Kelly Pruitt (Tenants) entered into a lease with Robert A. Burgess (Landlord) to rent a lot upon which to place a mobile home. The lease requires a payment of $85.00 per month, is silent as to its term, and requires thirty (30) days notice by the Tenants for its termination.
On November 15, 1986, the Tenants purchased a mobile home from Conner Mobile Homes. On the same day, the Tenants executed a Purchase Money Note and Security Agreement which, among other things, grantеd the seller a security interest in the mobile home. Oxford Finance Companies, Inc. (Oxford), by reason of various transfers, became the holder of the Purchase Money Note and Security Agreement. A certificate of title covering the mobile home was recorded with the South Carolina Deрartment of Highways and Public Transportation on March 27,1987.
On March 28,1989, the Tenants vacated the premises without providing notice to Oxford or to the Landlord. The Tenants defaulted under the Purchase Money Note and Security Agreement by failing to pay installments when due. The Tenants also became delinquеnt on their rent becoming due on April 1,1989.
After the Tenants’ departure, Oxford requested possession of the mobile home from the Landlord, who refused to turn over possession. The Landlord claimed he was entitled to the mobile home by virtue of a landlord’s lien for past due rent and late charges with priоrity over Oxford’s security interest. The trial court, sitting without a jury, ruled the Landlord had no lien, and even if he did, his lien was subordinate to Oxford’s. The trial court also granted judgment for Oxford against the Landlord for claim and delivery and conversion, and transferred the case to the jury roster for a trial as to damages. The Landlord appealed to this Court. We affirm.
LAW/ANALYSIS
This Court may affirm a lower court ruling upon any grounds appearing in the record, Sup. Ct. Rule 4, § 8, and we
No gоods or chattels whatsoever, lying or being in or upon any messuages, lands or tenements which are leased, shall be liable to be taken by virtue of аn execution or any pretense whatsoever, unless the party at whose suit the execution is sued out shall, before the removal of such goods from off the said premises by virtue of such execution or extent, pay to the landlord of the premises or his bailiff all such sums of money as shall be due fоr rent for the premises at the time of the taking of such goods or chattels by virtue of such execution not in excess of one year’s rent. In casе such arrears shall exceed one year’s rent, the party at whose suit such execution is sued out, on paying the landlord or his bailiff one year’s rеnt, may proceed to execute his judgment and the sheriff or other officer shall levy and pay to the plaintiff as well the money so paid for rent as the execution money.
Section 27-39-260 states:
When property distrained for arrears of rent is subject to the lien of a chattel mortgage placed upоn such property and recorded before the rent contract was entered upon or before such property was brought upon the rеnted premises, the landlord may pay the amount due upon such mortgage debt and subject the property to the payment thereof as well as to the payment of the amount due for rent and the tenant shall inform the officer making distress of any such liens. If the landlord declines or fails to pay such mortgage debt the officer shall return such property on which such chattel mortgage may be a lien to the tenant. And if the landlord have actual notice of any unpaid purchase money lien, such lien shall have priority to his claim for rent in the same manner as above provided for certain chattel mortgages.
While' these statutes
may
have given the Landlord some rights to the mobile home, both were repealed by Act No. 494
The general rule is that the rеpeal of a statute operates retrospectively, and has the effect of blotting the statute out completely as if it had never existed and of putting an end to all proceedings under it which have not been prosecuted to final judgment. Moreover, where the statute is regardеd not as creating a right, but only as providing a remedy where none existed at common law, its repeal has the effect of taking away the remеdy for acts or omissions occurring while the statute was still in force.
(citations omitted).
The Landlord contends the decision in Cochran v. Darcy, 5 S.C. 125 (1873) advances his cause, and that he had a contractual right that was vested in November of 1986 (when the lease was signed) which may not be affected by repeal of the aforementioned statutes. We disagree and hold Cochran is in-apposite.
In Cochran, the pаrties entered into two contracts for sums certain in 1867. Upon default by Darcy in 1872, Cochran obtained judgments for the sums due. Meanwhile, the legislature had passed the homestead exemption, and Darcy sought to claim the exemption against Cochran, thereby reducing Cochran’s recoverablе judgments by the amount of the exemption. The Cochran Court held that the exemption, if applied to the parties there, would impermissibly impair Cochran’s cоntractual rights to the full sums he deserved.
This case is distinguishable. Where Cochran’s contractual rights to certain monies arose in 1867, before the passаge of the act, the Landlord’s rights (if any) to possession of the mobile home arose, not at the time the lease was signed, but at the time the Tenants vаcated and became in arrears.
See Burnett v. Boukedes,
Lastly, the Landlord argues it should not be compelled to respond in this case for punitive dаmages. Punitive damages are recoverable in conversion cases in the
event it is determined the defendant’s acts have been willful, reckless, and/or committed with conscious indifference to the rights of others.
Hunt v. Jordan,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the lower court.
Notes
Ignorance of the law [or a] law, which everyone is bound to know, excuses no man. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 673 (5th ed. 1979).
