Blakely v. Frazier

20 S.C. 144, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 12, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 20 S.C. 144 (Blakely v. Frazier) 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
Blakely v. Frazier, 20 S.C. 144, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 134 (S.C. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Simpson.

In August, 1871, the plaintiffs, respondents, instituted the action below against William H. Frazier, one of the defendants, as executor of Marshall Frazier, deceased, demanding judgment for the sum of $5,099, with interest thereon from December 10th, 1866, less $120, admitted by plaintiffs to be due the said Frazier, said amount being due them, as alleged, for so much paid by them to Marshall, Beach & Co., of Charleston, on account of an overdraft of the said Frazier on a lot of 212 bales of cotton, shipped by the said plaintiffs for the said Frazier, through Marshall, Beach & Co., to Liverpool. The defendant' Frazier answered the complaint denying the indebtedness of the estate, and also suggested that W. A. Sanders had qualified as one of the executors of Marshall Frazier. This answer seems to have been put in in November, 1871.

In March, 1872, the plaintiffs obtained an order “That they have leave to amend their summons and complaint by adding the name of William A. Sanders, one of the executors of Marshall Frazier, deceased, as a defendant to the action.” It appears that no action was taken under this order, or at least there is nothing in the brief showing action. In October, 1873, a second [148]*148■order was passed by Judge Carpenter, That the case be withdrawn from the jury, and that plaintiffs have leave to amend their complaint within thirty days by making as a party defendant, William A. Sanders, as co-executor of William H. Frazier, of the last will and testament of Marshall Frazier, with apt words to charge him.” January 14th, 1874, the summons and complaint, as amended, were served on W. A. Sanders, and on W. H. Frazier on March 27th, 1874. To this amended complaint, Frazier and Sanders answered separately; Frazier submitting, in addition to his former answer, that the complaint of plaintiffs had not been amended within the thirty days allowed in his order, and the said amended complaint and summons had not been served on the said William A. Sanders as required by law; and he claimed the benefit of this non-compliance. Sanders, in his answer, denied the debt, plead the statute of limitations, and, also, that the amended complaint and summons had not been served on him in the manner as required by law, or within the time specified in the order.

The case was heard at the May Term, 1876, of the court of Richland county, with verdict for the plaintiffs. A new trial, however, was granted on appeal to the Supreme Court. 11 S. C. 122. It was then transferred to Edgefield county, where the defendants resided, and in 1879 it came up for trial before Judge Wallace, who, upon motion of the defendants, ordered a non-suit. This order was set aside by the Supreme Court and a new trial granted (15 S. C. 615); which trial was had at the March Term of the court, 1882, for Edgefield. The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $5,000; and the present appeal is from the judgment entered upon this verdict.

The appeal is based upon fourteen exceptions; but, as is usual where exceptions are so numerous, many of them rest upon the same alleged error presented in a different form. The first involves nothing more than a question of fact, and, as the case below was a jury case, we do not understand how it could be relied on here as a ground of appeal, in view of the emphatic provision of the constitution, that in such cases the jurisdiction of the court is limited to the correction of errors of law, and [149]*149also the often-repeated announcement of this court that it has no appellate jurisdiction except in cases of chancery.

The second charges error -to his Honor in permitting “ the account of sales submitted by the plaintiffs to go before the jury without any proof as to the charges and statements contained therein.” It is stated in the brief, that his Honor, in allowing this account of sales to go to the jury, said that “it was not to be regarded as evidence in itself, but was allowed to go to the jury, like a note or other paper requiring proof, to give opportunity to prove themand further, “that if the declarations, acts and conduct of Marshall Frazier, connected with the account of sales referred to and the reclamation made upon him by Beach, Root & Co., were such as to have induced a reasonable man to believe that he (M. Frazier) recognized such an account-sales as correct, and if the plaintiffs, Blakely and Copeland, acting in good faith and under such belief, were induced thereby to pay such reclamation, -then it would be competent for the jury to regard said account-sales as proved, at least as against M. Frazier and the defendants, his executors.” This account of sales, admitted under these circumstances, we think, was properly admitted. The judge seems to have fully explained to the jury that the introduction of the account was not intended as evidence of the items embraced therein, but as containing the debt in an itemized form, subject to proof, by the admission, conduct or acts of Marshall Frazier in connection therewith, or otherwise. Thus explained, there can be no valid objection to its admission.

The third exception alleges error, “because his Honor permitted the award ’ to go to the jury it having been heretofore decided in this case to be incompetent evidence to prove the overdraft by Frazier on his lot of cotton.” It is not necessary now to construe the former opinion of this court on the subject of this award; but admitting that the appellants’ interpretation of it is correct, to wit, that the award in itself was incompetent to prove the overdraft by Frazier on his lot of cotton, yet this would not exclude the award entirely from the case. This award was a part of the history of the case. It was one of the facts by which the plaintiffs became connected with the transaction, and the case could not be understood well without its introduction. [150]*150It does not appear that it was introduced by the plaintiffs, or was admitted by the court as competent evidence in itself, of the fact that Marshall Frazier had overdrawn to that extent on his cotton but as a part of the transaction in which the plaintiffs had paid the money, which they were claiming, and also as a basis upon which to found the introduction of evidence of the acts and conduct of Marshall Frazier in reference thereto. We see no error in its admission.

The fourth and fifth complain, that the verdict of the jury is not in accordance with the charge of the judge in regard to the value of gold and exchange, and as to the amount which Frazier was entitled to in U. S. currency on that account as the proceeds of his cotton, and that such being the fact, his Honor should have set aside the verdict and granted a new trial as moved for by appellant. The Circuit judge does not state fully the reasons of his refusal to grant the new trial. He does state, however, that it appeared to his satisfaction, that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict, and that there was not proper ground for the new trial; and, therefore, he refused the motion. The verdict was for a good deal less than the amount claimed. How the jury reached the verdict of $5,000, is not for this court to inquire. It may possibly have been capricious and unsupported by the evidence. If so this was a matter to be corrected on the motion for a new trial. It does not appear that it was reached by a disregard of the legal propositions charged by the judge in the matter, which constitutes the foundation of these exceptions, and, therefore, said exceptions are untenable.

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Related

Griffith v. Frazier
12 U.S. 9 (Supreme Court, 1814)
Walkenshaw v. Perzel
32 How. Pr. 310 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1866)
Perry v. Saint Joseph & Western Railroad
29 Kan. 420 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1883)
Walkinshaw v. Perzel
7 Rob. 606 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1867)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.C. 144, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blakely-v-frazier-sc-1883.