Fanning v. Bogacki
Fanning v. Bogacki
Opinion of the Court
The decree of the presiding Judge was as follows:
Decree: This is a suit in equity, the complaint in which alleges that in 1894 the land described in the complaint was sold by the master for Barnwell county in a partition suit among the plaintiffs, to which action W. H. Kennedy, holding two mortgages over the land, was made a party. That before said sale, the plaintiff, Mrs. Fanning, on behalf of herself and her children, had an oral agreement with C. Y. Bogacki, the defendant in this action, that he should buy in the land at this master’s sale and hold the same until, out of the rents, he reimbursed himself for the outlay in the pur *378 chase price and such sums as he should thereafter advance for the support of the said Mrs. Fanning and her children, whereupon he would reconvey the land to them. The complaint also alleges that, by reason of this alleged agreement being known at the sale, the bidding was chilled and the land was sold to the defendant at much less than its value— at a sacrifice unless the agreement be enforced. The complaint, among other things, prays for such relief as may be equitable and just.
The action was referred to the master to take the testimony and comes up for hearing before me in open Court upon this testimony.
The undisputed facts are that inT891, one G. S. Fanning was killed, and died seized and possessed of seven undivided eighths of the tract of land described in the complaint, the other one-eighth belonging to R. B. Fanning, who later conveyed it to the widow and children of G. S. Fanning. That he left surviving him his widow, Mrs. Lena Fanning, and certain infant children, the oldest being 20j/2 years and the youngest 4 years old at the time of the sale in 1894.. These children or their heirs are all plaintiffs in this action. That G. S. Fanning had given two mortgages over this land to one W. H.- Kennedy, now deceased. That in 1894 the-land was sold by the master in a partition suit brought by *379 Mrs. Fanning against her children and'the said mortgagee. There was only one bid, and that was made by Messrs. Patterson & Holman, who1 were the attorneys conducting that partition suit. Pursuant to that bid, the master’s deed was made to the present defendant, C. Y. Bogacki, who was then and is now a resident of the city of Montgomery, Ala , and who is a brother of the plaintiff, Mrs. Lena Fanning. C. Y. Bogacki was not present at the sale. The amount bid was the exact amount due on the mortgages, principal $752.60, interest from the date of the decree to the date of the sale $35.12, and costs $40.78. For at least one year, if not more, after the sale the defendant, Bogacki, permitted the plaintiffs to collect and appropriate the rents from the land. He sent money to the plaintiffs, and continued it so long as their necessities required it. The disputed facts are: The alleged contract and the allegation that the bidding was chilled by reason of said alleged contract or agreement.
The proof on the part of the defendant upon this point is his denial of the existence of the alleged oral contract. In his testimony he would not deny that such a contract existed in letters he had written to Mrs. Fanning. The plaintiffs *380 do not rely upon a written contract, but merely introduced certain letters of the defendant for the purpose of corroborating the testimony of the plaintiff and used the letters in the cross-examination of the defendant, with the aforesaid results, which to some extent must weaken the defendant's strong denial that such an oral contract existed.
After a careful consideration of the testimony and exhibits, my conclusion is that the alleged oral contract did exist.
In addition to the foregoing, however, such an amendment would not be “in the furtherance of justice,” as required by the Code. Bliss on Code Pleadings (3d Ed.), sec. 431; Suber v. Richardson, 61 S. C. 393, 39 S. E. 540; Coward v. Boyd, 79 S. C. 134, 60 S. E. 311; Wallace v. Dowling, 86 S. C. 307, 68 S. E. 571, 138 Am. St. Rep. 1054, 31 Cyc. 216.
*381 By specific performance both plaintiffs and defendants received justice.
I, therefore, refuse to allow the amendment, and the plaintiffs are entitled to specific performance, unless they are guilty of laches, which was advanced by the defendant in argument as a bar to relief to the plaintiffs.
The acknowledged and reasonable confidence of the plaintiff in the integrity and protecting love of the defendant fully explains the fact that they took no action against him until he attempted to violate the contract in 1913.
I, therefore, hold that laches is not a bar to specific performance of this contract. Nor is the action prematurely brought even if the defendant has not fully reimbursed himself, for he has repudiated the contract and attempted to sell the land. Payne v. Melton, 67 S. C. 233, 45 S. E. 154; Crosby v. Ga. Realty Co., 138 Ga. 746, 76 S. E. 38.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that when out of the rents of the said lands the defendant shall have reimbursed himself for the amount paid at the master’s sale, $828.50, with interest at the legal rate, and such advance *382 ments as he may have made to the plaintiffs, the clerk of this Court do execute and deliver to the plaintiffs a sufficient deed of conveyance, conveying to them in fee simple the land in question.
And it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that this cause be, and the same is hereby, recommitted to the master for Barnwell county, to take an accounting between the plaintiffs and defendant, and to report his findings of fact and law thereon to this Court forthwith. (Signed) Ernest Moore, Presiding Judge.
January 21, 1919.
The opinion of -the Court was delivered by
For the reasons stated in the Circuit decree it is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Fanning Et Al. v. Bogacki
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Equity — Statutes of Limitation — Application.—In suit to enforce an executory agreement whereby defendant purchased plaintiff’s land upon sale in a partition suit, to hold the same for plaintiffs and reimburse himself from rents, the legal bar of the 10 and 20 year statute of limitations cannot be interposed by defendant. 2. Specific Performance — Establishment of Oral Contract — Evidence. — In a suit to enforce an agreement whereby defendant purchased plaintiff’s land upon sale in partition suit to hold for plaintiffs and reimburse himself from rents, evidence held, sufficient to establish the agreement. 3. Pleading —■ Amendments During Trial ■ — • Changing Defenses. ■ — ■ Defendant’s motion for leave to amend answer by setting up statute of frauds, made after the case was argued, could not be allowed under Code Civ. Proc. 1912, sec. 224, where its effect was to change defense from denial of-oral contract to avoidance. 4. Pleading — Trial Amendments — Furtherance of Justice. — Defendant’s motion for leave to .amend answer by setting up statute of frauds, made after the case was argued, may be denied as not in furtherance of justice, in view of Code Civ. Proc. 1912, sec. 224. 5. Specific Performance — Laches—Contract to Hold Real Estate in Trust. — An oral contract by which defendant purchased land at a partition sale and agreed to hold the same for plaintiffs until defendant had reimbursed himself out of. the rents is valid at common law, and, where the reimbursement contemplated required a long time, a delay by plaintiff of about 19 years in beginning suit was not laches. 6. Specific Performance — Actions—Premature.—An action for specific performance of a contract whereby defendant, purchasing land at partition sale,' agreed to hold the same in trust for plaintiffs, brought before defendant had fully reimbursed himself from rents as agreed, but after he had repudiated contract and tried to sell the land, is not premature.