Court Opinion

ID: 3886820
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:16:20.087383+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:50:15.775752
License: Public Domain

February 26, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage of real estate.
On the 8th of January, 1904, the defendant, Mrs. Ellie Brooks Jones, executed a note for the sum of $750.00, payable on or before the 1st of January, 1905, to F.M. Mixson, and, to secure the payment of the note, executed a mortgage on a certain tract of land. On the 5th of November, 1904, F.M. Mixson, for valuable consideration, assigned the note and mortgage to the plaintiff, J.D. Whittle. Shortly after the plaintiff became the assignee of the note and mortgage, he notified Mrs. Ellie Brooks Jones of this fact. *Page 207 
On the 8th of December, 1904, Mrs. Jones executed a formal deed of conveyance of the mortgaged premises to the defendant, A.C. DePass, in fee simple.
The defendants, Mrs. Jones and A.C. DePass, while admitting the execution of the note and mortgage, interpose the defense, that they are void on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation on the part of F.M. Mixson, consisting of certain statements alleged to have been made by F.M. Mixson to Mrs. Jones with reference to a pressing club and fixtures then being operated by him and sold to Mrs. Jones, the purchase price of which is the consideration of the note and mortgage.
His Honor, the Circuit Judge, rendered a judgment of foreclosure for the amount claimed by the plaintiff.
The following are the reasons assigned by him: "The testimony is lengthy, and it is not my purpose to review the same in this order. It appears that the defendant, Ellie Brooks Jones, was not successful in operating the pressing club purchased from Mixson, and soon became dissatisfied with the same, and it is fair to state that it did not come up to the representations made at the time of the sale, and if the defendant had sought the aid of the court of equity to relieve her from the bargain, or to rescind her contract, she would have been entitled to relief. Instead, however, as above stated, she sold out the entire plant to the defendant, A.C. DePass, who at the time was operating a competing club, and in the transaction executed the deed of conveyance of the mortgaged premises. She has placed herself voluntarily in a position where neither she nor the Court can restore the original status.
"She has received a valuable consideration for the good will and fixtures of the club she bought, and is now estopped from asserting that it is of no value. In short, she has ratified and confirmed the trade, and by so doing is not now in a position to maintain the defense she has set up.
"The defendant, A.C. DePass, who has undisturbed possession of that which he purchased from Mrs. Jones (the *Page 208 
pressing club), is therefore a stranger to the transaction between Mixson and Mrs. Jones. It is not contended that any one overreached him, therefore his defense should be overruled, except such an equity as he would naturally acquire in the sale of the mortgaged premises as being a junior purchaser."
The main question presented by the exceptions is whether the failure of Mrs. Jones to seek a rescission of the contract and her sale of the property, which she purchased from F.M. Mixson, to A.C. DePass, deprived her of the right to rely upon the defense of fraud and misrepresentation.
Mrs. Jones had the right to elect whether she would pursue the remedy of having the contract rescinded for the alleged fraud and misrepresentation, or rely upon the facts as defense to the plaintiff's cause of action to the extent that she was thereby damaged. The fact that she had waived the right to a rescission of the contract did not defeat her right to set up the fraud and misrepresentation as a defense to the extent of the damages which she thereby sustained.State v. Gaillard, 2 Bay., 11; Carter v. Walker, 2 Rich., 40;McCorkle v. Doby, 1 Strob., 396; Hickson v. Early, 62 S.C. 42,39 S.E., 782; Ellison v. Johnson, 74 S.C. 202.
The land now owned by A.C. DePass is only subject to the amount due by Mrs. Jones at the time she conveyed it to him, after deducting the amount of damages sustained through the alleged fraud and misrepresentation.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be modified and that the case be remanded to that Court, for the purpose of determining the amount due on the plaintiff's mortgage, in accordance with the foregoing principles. *Page 209