Burkhalter v. Townsend

138 S.E. 34, 139 S.C. 324, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 5, 1927
Docket12202
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 34 (Burkhalter v. Townsend) 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
Burkhalter v. Townsend, 138 S.E. 34, 139 S.C. 324, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 161 (S.C. 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This is an appeal from an order of his Honor Judge Henry, striking out the defendant’s answer as sham and irrelevant, and as not stating facts sufficient to constitute a defense.

The cause of action of the plaintiffs is based upon alelgations of- fact, which are substantially as follows:

One P. L. Breeden, of Marlboro County, owned a tract of land containing 400 acres, more or less, known as Breeden-Adamville plantation, in Adamville township ,of said County; on December 30, 1918, he leased it to the defendant, Townsend for a term of 5 years, beginning January 1, 1919, and ending December 31, 1923, at a yearly rental of $6,000.00, payable on or before October 1st of each year; the contract was in writing, and a copy of it said to be attached as an exhibit to the complaint, although it does not appear in the transcript; P. D. Breeden, the lessor, died' about Ocotber 10, 1919, leaving a will which was admitted to probate in Marlboro county; by the will he devised the premises which had been leased, to the plaintiffs, Alma E. Burkhalter and Margaret E. Holliday, for life, which entitled them to receive the rent as it fell due under the lease to the defendant'; the defendant paid the stipulated rent .for the years 1919, 1920, and 1921; in the fall of the year 1921 the defendant abandoned the leased premises and has refused to pay any rent at all for the years 1922 and 1923; the plaintiffs exercised due diligence in renting the land for the years 1922 and 1923, but $3,000.00 was as much as they could get; the plaintiffs give the defendant credit upon the rent due October 1, 1922, for the $3,000.00 collected from other tenants, and also the same upon the rent due *330 October 1, 1923, and claim the unpaid balance of .$3,000.00 on the rent of 1922, with interest from October 1, 1922, and the same for 1923, with interest from October 1, 1923. (This synopsis of the complaint, is, of course, intended only as such, and by no means as an adjudication of facts.)

The defendant’s answer will be set out in full by the reporter in the report of the case.

After the answer had been served, the counsel for the plaintiffs served upon counsel for the defendant notice of a motion to dismiss “the alleged answer” on the ground:

“That the same is sham, irrelevant, and does riot state facts sufficient to constitute a defense.”

Upon hearing the motion, his Honor Judge Henry signed -an order “dismissing” the answer, for the reasons stated in the notice. The order is dated December 1, 1925.

On the same day his Honor Judge Henry signed the following order:

“Answer in the above-entitled cause having been stricken out and dismissed, it is upon motion of J. K. Owens, attorney for plaintiff, ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the above-entitled cause be and the same is transferred from calendar 1 to calendar 3.
“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff have judgment against the defendant in the sum of $7,200.00.”

Thereafter counsel for the defendant made a motion before his Honor Judge Henry for an order vacating the orders hereinbefore referred to, which was refused in an order dated December 4, 1925. It will not be necessary to refer further to this notice and order, as the questions for decision fairly arise with reference to the order striking out (“dismissing”) the answer and rendering judgment in favor of the plaintiff, from which the defendant has appealed.

*331 I. First, then, as to the order striking out the answer as sham, irrelevant and failing to state facts sufficient to, constitute a defense.

(1) Is it sham? A sham answer is one good in form, but false in fact, and not pleaded in good faith; being a mere pretense, set up in bad faith and without color of fact. Bliss, Code PI. page 645 (note 162). The motion to strike out an answer as sham presents a question of fact to be determined by the Court upon affidavits, or in such manner as the Court may direct. Union Guano Co. v. Garrison, 130 S. C., 404; 126, S. E., 133. Germofert Co. v. Castles, 97 S. C., 389; 81 S. E., 665. Bank v. Fripp, 101 S. C., 185; 85 S. E., 1070. Chemical Co. v. Farmington, 100 S. C., 196; 84 S. E., 710. The plaintiff who1 moves to strike out an answer, good in form, as sham, is skating upon very thin ice, in view of the right of the defendant to have the issues of fact tried by a jury and not up affidavits; the rule adopted by this Court is that the power will be very sparingly exercised, and only where the pleading is manifestly false, interposed to delay and defeat the plaintiff’s action, and only in cases free from doubt. Cases above cited, and Ransom v. Anderson, 9 S. C., 438. In the Germofert Case the Court quotes 31 Cyc. 628:

“The motion to strike out a pleading or defense as sham is not looked upon with favor, and will be granted only, where the falsity clearly appears, since the truth or falsity of a pleading is ordinarily to be tried by a jury, with full opportunity for producing, examining and cross-examining witness.”

It does not appear that the Circuit Judge followed the prescribed course of determining the issue of the truth or falsity of the allegations of ■ the answer “upon affidavits, or in such manner as the Court may direct,” and consequently he was in error in striking out the answer as sham.

*332 (2) Is the answer irrelevant? An answer or a defense is irrelevant which has no substantial relation to the controversy between the parties to an action. In Smith v. Smith, 50 S. C., 54; 27 S. E., 545, the Court quotes Pomeroy, Code Remedies, § 661 :

“An allegation is irrelevant, when the issue formed by its denial can have no connection with, nor effect upon the cause of action (quoted also in the Germofert Case).”

The motion of the plaintiff is directed against the entire answer as irrelevant, and not to the separate defenses severally. If, therefore, the answer puts in issue any material fact which the plaintiff was required to prove, the motion must fail.

The answer contains allegations which were clearly subject to a motion to make more definite and certain, but the indefiniteness, uncertainty, or insufficiency of an allegation or a defense does not malee it irrelevant.

The plaintiffs sue for damages on account of the defendant’s breach of his renting contract. It was their duty to minimize their damages as far as they could reasonably do so. They recognize this obligation in the allegation that, after the defendant abandoned the premises, they advertised the place for rent and obtained as fair a rental as they could have done. The defendant denies these allegations and necessarily put the plaintiffs to proof of them. Other allegations of the complaint are put in issue by the answer, but this is sufficient to relieve it of the vice of irrelevancy as a whole.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 34, 139 S.C. 324, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burkhalter-v-townsend-sc-1927.