Jeffcoat v. Wingard
Jeffcoat v. Wingard
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Daniel J. Jeffcoat owned a tract of land in Lexington county. He was in debt, and a judgment was obtained against him. Fie appealed to Mr: S. P. Wingard to assist him. On the 29th of October, 1889, Mr. Jeffcoat made a conveyance of 420 acres of land to Mr. Wingard, absolute in form for a stated consideration of $450. This deed was not recorded until the 27th day of May, 1890. Mr. Jeffcoat had several children (13 in number). On the day of the record of the deed, Mr. Wingard gave to John, Frank and Charles Jeffcoat, three of the children of Daniel J. Jeffcoat, an agreement of which the following is a copy:
“The State of South Carolina, Couiffy of Lexington. I, S. P. Wingard, of Lexington county and the State aforesaid, do hereby bind myself, my heirs, executor and administrator, to inake or execute a deed or title to four hundred and twenty acres, more or less, situate in said county and State, whereon Daniel J. Jeffcoat now resides, to the sons of the said Daniel J., viz., John, Frank, and Charlie Jeffcoat, when the said John, Frank and Charlie have paid to me, the said S. P. Wingard, my heirs or assigns, the amount of a judgment and note, which I hold against the said Daniel J. Jeffcoat and any other expenses which I, the said S. P. Wingard, may have to pay on account of the said tract of land. After the above named amounts, with the-interest on them at the rate of seven per cent, per annum have been paid by the said John, Frank and Charlie, to the said S. P. Wingard, his heirs or assigns, say within five years from this date. Then I, the said S. P. Wingard, do hereby bind myself, my executors and administrators, to execute a title for said tract of *485 land to the said John, Frank and Charlie Jeffcoat. In testimony whereof, I have this the 27th day of May, A. D. 1890, subscribed my name and affixed my seal, -in the presence of I hese witnesses. S. P. Wingard. (X. S.) Jas. J. Wingard, Mary C. Wingard.”
Daniel remained on the land, but on what conditions does not appear. Some time thereafter, Daniel died. His widow had not renounced her dower, and after her husband’s death she made a deed to Mr. Wingard of all her interest, includi ng her dower in the land previously conveyed to Mr. Wingard by her husband. In her deed Mrs. Jeffcoat reserved a li fe estate in as much of the land as she desired to use during her life. Some of the parties to the option agreement remained on the land with their mother, and it is quite clear that the use was under the reservation contained in the deed of Mi's. Jeffcoat to Mr. Wingard. Mr. Wingard died, and so did Mrs. Jeffcoat. Possession was demanded by the representatives of Mr. Wingard, and this suit was brought for specific performance under the agreement to reconvey. The complaint alleged that the deed of Daniel J. Jeffcoat to S. P. Wingard was intended as a security for a debt, and, therefore, a mortgage. Charles Jeffcoat died leaving children. John, Frank and the children of Charles brought this action, demanding specific performance of the agreement to reconvey. The case was tried in the Court of Common Pleas for Lexington county. The presiding Judge held that the deed from Dainel J. Jeffcoat to S. P. Wingard was a mortgage, but refused to grant specific performance, and held that the deed from Daniel J. Jeffcoat to S. P. Wingard was a mortgage, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to relief, not as granted under the option, but as heirs at law of Daniel J. Jeffcoat. He held that there were other heirs at law of Daniel J. Jeffcoat. He ordered the other heirs to be made parties, and the usual ’provisions for the enforcement of the mortgage. From this judgment the defendants appealed. As this Court sees it, there is but one question in the case:
*486 Was the deed from Daniel J. Jeffcoat to S. P. Wingard a mortgage ?
The decree states:
“In this connection it should properly be stated that the plaintiffs concede that, if the deed has not been shown to have been intended as a mortgage, no relief can be awarded them under the agreement to reconvey, considered merely as an option to purchase the lands, and the plaintiffs 'in open Court admit that this is true, for the reason that there has been no compliance with the terms of the option or tender of performance thereof.”
The judgment is reversed, and the complaint dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jeffcoat Et Al. v. Wingard Et Al.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Mortgages — Absolute •—• Parol Evidence.—A deed absolute in form can be shown by parol to have been intended as a mortgage. 2. Mortgages — Absolute Deed. — Proof that an absolute deed was intended as a mortgage must be clear and convincing. 3. Mortgages—Absolute Deeds—Evidence. — Evidence held insufficient to sustain a finding that a deed absolute in form was intended as a mortgage. 4s. Life Estates — Running of Statute — Adverse Possession.—Where children lived on land under their mother’s reservation of a life estate, limitations did not begin to run in their favor against the remainder-man until the expiration of such life estate.