August 2, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Respondent's statement of the case: "This action was commenced against the defendants, J.B. Reynolds and Minnie F. Reynolds, some time during the year 1911, for the foreclosure of the mortgage described in the complaint, which said defendants alleged had been paid and satisfied. A judgment against said defendants for the full amount demanded in the complaint for the foreclosure of said mortgage *Page 351 and the sale of the mortgaged premises was obtained. After the land had been advertised for sale pursuant to said judgment, and before the sale, the said defendant, J.B. Reynolds, placed on record in the office of the clerk of Court of Darlington county an instrument dated November 22, 1888, purporting to be a deed from one Sarah Tabitha Windham, under whom the mortgagors claimed title, conveying the greater part of the mortgaged premises to Ernest Clifford Reynolds, son of the said J.B. Reynolds, and Minnie F. Reynolds, and the other children of the said J.B. Reynolds and Minnie F. Reynolds, if any, thereafter to be born. The appellants, as children of J.B. and Minnie F. Reynolds, all claim under said instrument. After the commencement of this action several judgments were obtained against the said J.B. Reynolds and Minnie F. Reynolds. The plaintiff, therefore, amended its summons and complaint so as to make all their children and lien creditors parties to the action, and served the amended summons and complaint on all of them. Immediately after the service of the amended summons and complaint on the children of J.B. and Minnie F. Reynolds (who are the appellants herein), E.C. Dennis, Esq., an attorney practicing at Darlington, S.C. notified plaintiff's counsel that he had been retained to present the said defendant, and asked for an extension of time in which to answer the complaint. Plaintiff's counsel granted the extension of time asked for by Mr. Dennis, but no answer having been served prior to the next term of Court, refused to grant further extension unless Mr. Dennis would consent to an order of reference to be taken at that term of Court. Mr. Dennis, therefore, consented to the order of reference granted by Judge Shipp, and J.F. Pate, Esq., who had previously been appointed guardian ad litem for all the infant defendants, except Asa Reynolds, also consented to the said order of reference. It appears that no notice of the application for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for the defendant, Asa Reynolds, who is an infant over 14 years of age, was *Page 352 served on him, his infancy being unknown to the plaintiff in the action until his answer was served, long after the order of reference was granted. This alleged irregularity was not mentioned in the Court below, although said infant was there represented by a guardian ad litem, appointed on his petition, and was unknown to the presiding Judge and to respondent's counsel until the proposed case for appeal was served."
1. Asa Reynolds was an infant and not properly before the Court. This makes the order of reference voidable as to him, whether it was known to the plaintiff or not, and he is entitled to have the question opened at this stage of the case. Mr. Dennis appeared only to secure an extension of time. Now, while anything that he might have done in order to secure the extension might have bound the adults, he could waive nothing for the minors who had not answered, and certainly he could not bind Asa, who had not even been served with the notice to procure the appointment of a guardian ad litem.
2. The only other question that need be considered is, Could Mr. McFarland, who had been attorney for one of the judgment creditors and whose judgment it was sought to enforce in this case, have been appointed as referee to decide the issues in this case? There is no attack on Mr. McFarland's ability or integrity; both are above reproach. It is simply a question of disqualification, and he is disqualified.
The order appealed from is reversed. *Page 353