Adeimy v. Dleykan
This text of 107 S.E. 35 (Adeimy v. Dleykan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff instituted an action in claim and delivery on July 6, 1920, against the defendants, alleged to be partners, operating under the name of Royal Cafe. The property claimed consists of a stock of goods and fixtures located in a store-house in the city of Camden. The plaintiff gave bond or undertaking in the penal sum of $10,000 and the surety justified on July 10, 1920; the bond is without date. The fact is not distinctly stated in the record; nor the date, but we assume that the sheriff took charge- of the personal property. , Whether or not he delivered it to the plaintiff is, in the conditioq of the record, a matter of conjecture. It is equally uncertain whether or not the defendants have answered the complaint.
On July 15, 1920, the defendant Dleykan applied to and obtained from Hon. W. H. Townsend, Judge of the Fifth Circuit (who styles himself “presiding Judge,” from which we -infer that it was during term time at Camden,) an order requiring the plaintiff and the defendant Khoury to show cause before him in open court at Camden, on-July 16th (the following day) why the claim and delivery proceedings should not be dismissed upon the ground “that no cause of action for claim and delivery is stated,” or, failing in this, why the undertaking given thereunder should not be increased, the order also providing that such parties be restrained and enjoined from disposing of or interfering with the property which had been seized in the proceeding. (This order for injunction was unlimited; evidently it was intended only pending the hearing of the rule.)
It is stated in the case that, after argument of counsel, Judge Townsend passed the order which will be referred *162 to later; but how the matters considered were presented to him does not appear; though it would seem from his order that certain statements, whether under oath or not we do not know, were made by Dleykan at the heáring before him.
The order of Judge Townsend contained the following conclusions : (1) That the affidávit was insufficient in not showing that Dleykan was in possession of or wrongfully detained the property from the plaintiff; (2) that these facts might be implied from the allegation that the cause of the detention by defendants was -unknown; (3) that the deficiency wasi supplied by the statements of Dleykan on the hearing before him that he was in possession of the goods, and claimed their return, and of his counsel that he denied, the plaintiff’s claim; (4) that by these matters, the claim of Dle)d-can and his denial of plaintiff’s title, he has waived the defects in the affidavit; (5) that it had not been made to appear that the bond or undertaking was insufficient; (6) that the rule to show cause be discharged; (7) that the restraining order be vacated; (8) that Dleykan’s application for a return of the property to him be refused; (9) that the plaintiff have leave to amend his complaint and affidavit by alleging that the property was in; the possession of Dleykan, and that the latter denies plaintiff’s claim of title thereto.
The judgment of this Court is that the order of the Circuit Judge be affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
107 S.E. 35, 116 S.C. 159, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adeimy-v-dleykan-sc-1921.