Babb v. Sullivan

21 S.E. 277, 43 S.C. 436, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 277 (Babb v. Sullivan) 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.

Bluebook
Babb v. Sullivan, 21 S.E. 277, 43 S.C. 436, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 171 (S.C. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Benet.

This was a motion to amend an exe[437]*437cution made ex parte Joseph P. Latimer and John H. Latimer, as executor's of the last will and testament of Hewlett Sullivan, deceased, in re M. E. Babb, as clerk, successor, &c., v. Hewlett Sullivan. The same moving parties made, at the same time, two other motions, one wire Rice, as clerk, successor, &c., v. Sullivan, to vacate a judgment; and one in re Shell, as clerk, successor, &c., v. Sullivan, to quash an execution. All the three cases in which the several motions were made were cldsely connected and interdependent. The Circuit Judge, in the decretal order appealed from, refused the first two motions, but granted the third, namely, the motion to amend the execution, remarking that “this motion is made in the event that both of the preceding motions were refused.”

To make plain the grounds upon which this third motion was granted, as well as the grounds upon which the order granting it was appealed from, it is necessary to set forth the following statement of facts: In 1877, Ira Rice, as clerk of court and successor of Homer L. McGowan, commissioner in equity for Laurens County, in a suit for foreclosure against Hewlett Sullivan and his sureties, John Hellamsand C. P. Sullivan, jr., recovered judgment against Hewlett Sullivan and John Helianas for $4,368.98. On this judgment Hewlett Sullivan, from time to time, made various payments. In 1883, a copy summons to renew execution in the main cause was served on Hewlett Sullivan. It appears that both the original summons and the copy have been lost, and that there was some dispute whether the summons, in its terms, stated the amount for which it was proposed to renew the execution. But the attorneys who issued the summons made affidavit that, to the best of their receollection, the amount was stated therein as being for $1,000, and for $368.53 costs. To this summons to renew, the defendant, Hewlett Sullivan, failed to file either answer or demurrer, or to give notice of appearance. On 2d of December, 1884, therefore, Judge Pressley granted his order, that “the judgment and execution of Ira Bice, cleric, plaintiff, against Hewlett Sullivan, be renewed, to have the force, form, and effect of the former recovery, with leave to G. W. Shell to issue execution therefor.” And on 12th December, 1884, [438]*438counsel representing sundry creditors of M. A. Sullivan, deceased, to whose estate the debt was owing, procured the issuing of an execution in said cause against Hewlett Sullivan for $1,000, and for $368.53 costs.

When this renewed execution was levied upon the land of Hewlett Sullivan on the 12th March, 1885, an action was commenced by him on 23d March, 1885, for the purpose of enjoining its enforcement, and to have the judgment cancelled and marked satisfied. In that action (Sullivan v. Shell) the plea of full payment was set up. The cause was heard by Judge Hudson, who granted the order of injunction prayed for. On appeal to this court, the judgment of the Circuit Court was reversed and the complaint dismissed. Sullivan v. Shell, 36 S. C., 578. In that ease, Mr. Chief Justice Mclver, delivering the opinion of the court, said, that the plaintiff (Sullivan) was not entitled to maintain the action, adding: “If he ever had any remedy, it should have been sought by a motion in the cause in which the judgment complained of was rendered. But even if he had resorted to that mode of relief, we do not see how he could have successfully met the plea of res adjudícala. When he was served with summons to show cause why the judgment should not be revived and execution issued to enforce the same, he was afforded the opportunity to raise the very same questions which he now seeks to raise by this action; and this court has repeatedly decided that one who fails to do so when afforded such opportunity, is forever afterwards estopped from doing so.” Ibid., 580. This opinion was handed down on 3d September, 1892. Thereafter, as we gather from the statement of facts in the brief, the renewed execution was again levied, when, Hewlett Sullivan having died, his executors brought another action, claiming that the consideration of the judgment had failed, and asking relief on that ground. That action also was dismissed.

Again was the renewed execution levied, whereupon, the executors instituted this proceeding, making a motion in the original cause in which the judgment was rendered for an order to amend the renewed execution, by reducing the amount from $1,000 to $76. It is not unlikely that this mode of relief [439]*439was resorted to in consequence of the suggestion made in Sullivan v. Shell, supra, and quoted above. This motion was heard on its merits in the Circuit Court by Judge Fraser, who rendered his decree in favor of the executors, and granted the order moved for, holding as follows: “The plaintiff contends that as the amount of the balance due upon the judgment was stated in the summons to renew, the defendant was estopped from disputing it. Assuming for the purpose of this motion that the summons did state that there was a balance of $1,000 and costs, $368.53, due upon the judgment, the order of Judge Pressley did not., but renewed the judgment with the form, force, and effect of the former recovery. The executors, therefore, have the right to show, if they can, that the execution has been renewed for too large a sum. The balance due upon the judgment at the date of the order of renewal being in dispute, it is ordered, that it be referred to J. K. Jennings, Esq., as special referee, to take testimony and report to this court the balance ascertained by him to be due upon said judgment at the time said execution was renewed; and that the execution be amended, if the same be necessary, so as to make it issue for the amount due upon said judgment at “the time said execution was renewed.” From this decretal order the plaintiff appeals upon several grounds.

1 The view we take of the case renders it unnecessary to pass upon more than the first and fifth exception; which raise the questions of res adjudicada and laches. It seems to us that the mere statement of the facts as above set forth, with the various proceedings had both on Circuit and in this court, and with the dates showing the time which has elapsed, clearly calls for a reversal of Judge Fraser’s decretal order on the two grounds of res adjudicada and laches. It is admitted for the defendant that in Sullivan v. Shell, supra, the issue of full payment has been adjudicated. But it is argued interrogatively that the plea of part payment might not constitute a defence to the application to renew an execution. We cannot so hold. We see no reason for holding that the defence of part payment could not have been set up at the time the application to renew was made. On the contrary, we hold [440]*440that there was then offered to the defendant Sullivan an opportunity in law to set up the plea on which his privies now insist. He failed to take advantage of it, and suffered judgment to be taken for the amount stated in the summons to renew.

Following in the line of the doctrine laid down by this court in Hart v. Bates, 17 S. C., 40, and in Ex parte Roberts, 19 S. C., 156-8, where Mr. Justice McGowan clearly defines the requisites of the plea of res adjudieata,

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 277, 43 S.C. 436, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babb-v-sullivan-sc-1895.