Allen v. Pittard
Allen v. Pittard
Opinion of the Court
The court is of the opinion that the judge of the superior court erred in dismissing the action. .Properly construed, the petition with its amendments is the equivalent of an equitable action in ejectment; for the petitioner asks, in her prayers, that the deed made by Carl Bagwell as receiver to Mack Pittard be canceled, and that the title to the land in controversy be decreed to be in her, subject only to the security deed in favor of the Federal Land Bank of Columbia. The allegations of the petition as amended are sufficient, if proved, to entitle the plaintiff to the relief she seeks. Allen had conveyed the land to the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, and thereby had divested himself of legal title. Nevertheless he retained' an equitable title which authorized him to hold possession, or to recover it as against any one except the Federal Land Bank of Columbia. When he conveyed the land by a second security deed to his wife (the petitioner), he invested her with title subordinate only to the title of the Federal Land Bank, but he still reserved to himself an equitable interest in the title to the land and the right of possession. The plaintiff is not bound by the judgments in the suits in which she was not a party, nor is she bound by the proceedings in the receivership, or the proceedings which resulted in the setting apart of a homestead. She has never had her day in court. She alleges that she loaned her husband a thousand dollars, to secure which he executed a security deed and gave her his note as evidence of the debt. Finding that he would not be able to pay his note, he agreed with her that if she would surrender his note she could take the land in payment of the debt. It is true that the written evidence of this agreement is not a deed; it is not witnessed; but the language of the writing is clear enough to bear evidence of the intention of the parties to transfer to petitioner, in exchange for the note of the debtor which she held, all of the equity belonging to the debtor, subject to the title of the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, and with this the right to the possession of the land unless and until she might be dispossessed by the bank. It seems that during the pendency of this suit the plaintiff was dispossessed, and
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.