49 S.E. 569 | S.C. | 1904
November 24, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The facts of this case are fully stated in the decree of his Honor, the special Judge, which will be set out in the report of the case. This Court is satisfied with the conclusions announced in the Circuit decree, except that in the matter of the $1,922.50 applied to the extinguishment of the judgment of Witte v. Clowney, the interest should be calculated from the 27th of January, as the record shows that the money was applied to the satisfaction of the judgment on that day, instead of the time mentioned in the decree. The reasons for our concurrence are, however, not the same in all respects as those upon which the special Judge bases his conclusions, as will hereinafter be shown.
The pleadings raise the question whether the plaintiff was a purchaser of the land for valuable consideration without notice of such facts as rendered its title null and void. A plaintiff as well as a defendant may assert this right. McGee
v. Jones,
The first exception assigns error in the ruling that the deed to Mrs. Clowney was absolutely void, and as a nullity carries with it the plaintiff's mortgage and the title based thereon under the foreclosure proceedings. The authorities cited in the argument of the plaintiff's attorneys fully sustain the position that the deed was not absolutely void, but only voidable. This exception should be sustained.
The third exception assigns error in not finding that the plaintiff did not have notice of any breach of trust on the part of the trustee or Mrs. Clowney, which affected the validity of the deed executed by the trustee to Mrs. Clowney. The defendant's attorneys served notice that they would ask this Court to sustain the decree in this respect upon the additional ground "that it was contrary to the law and public policy and a breach of trust on the part of Wm. J. Clowney, trustee, to execute a deed of trust property to his wife, the said Margaret M. Clowney, of all of which facts the plaintiff had notice before, and at the time of taking its mortgage from the said Margaret M. Clowney."
The plaintiff's attorneys contended that the deed of W. J. Clowney, trustee, to Margaret M. Clowney, does not show on its face that the grantee was the wife of the grantor, and the fact that she was his wife cannot affect plaintiff's rights as a mortgagee or purchaser for valuable consideration *240
without notice. It is, however, a fair and reasonable inference from the testimony that H.A. Gaillard, the plaintiff's attorney, had notice that Mrs. Clowney was the wife of the trustee, especially as it appears in the record that he was a subscribing witness to the execution of this deed. Knowledge of this fact on the part of the attorney is attributed as notice to his principal, the plaintiff herein.Blackwell v. Mortgage Co.,
We are thus squarely confronted with the solution of the proposition whether the conveyance of the land by the trustee to his wife was in itself a breach of trust which public policy demands should have the effect of rendering the transaction voidable. The authorities are in accord as to the general principle that a trustee cannot buy at his own sale. The doctrine, with its limitations, is clearly stated in Anderson v. Butler,
Does a sale by the trustee to his wife of the trust property come within the spirit of this principle, which strikes at the root of danger and removes the trustee from temptation to sell the property in such a manner that he will thereby receive a benefit either directly or indirectly? The husband and the wife sustain towards each other a highly confidential *241
and fiduciary relation; and transactions between them are to be scrutinized with great jealousy, especially when it is made to appear that advantage was taken of the wife. Way
v. Ins. Co.,
This question as to the right of the trustee to sell the trust property to his wife, although new in our State, has been adjudicated elsewhere. In Bassett v. Shoemaker,
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed, except in the particular hereinbefore mentioned, and that it be modified in that respect.