Chichester & Co. v. Hastie

9 S.C. 330, 1878 S.C. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 18, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 9 S.C. 330 (Chichester & Co. v. Hastie) 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
Chichester & Co. v. Hastie, 9 S.C. 330, 1878 S.C. LEXIS 28 (S.C. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Haskell, A. J.

Ou motion of the defendant, upon “the ground that the allegata and probata did not agree,” an order of nonsuit in invitum was granted in this case, and a motion by plaintiffs for leave to amend the pleadings refused. The plaintiffs’ counsel gave notice at the time that they would move before the presiding Judge, at the then term, on a day indicated, to set aside the order of non-suit, and would, at the same time, renew the motion to amend the pleadings. Both motions were granted.

The defendant appeals:

“First. From the order setting aside the order of nonsuit granted at the trial of the case June 20, 1876; and
“Second. From the order giving leave to amend the declaration as plaintiffs’ attorneys may be advised; and also requiring defend[331]*331ant to plead, answer or demur to such amended pleadings within forty days from the service of a copy thereof.”

The appeal from the order setting aside the nonsuit presents nothing but the question as to the authority of a Circuit Judge in term time to set aside an order of nonsuit in invitum made by him, on motion of defendant, at the same term of the Court; or, in the words of counsel for the appellant, Could the Circuit Judge lawfully make such an order?”

The opinion of this Court is that the Circuit Judge could, in the exercise of his discretion, correct or set aside during the term an order of nonsuit made by himself at the same term,

The case of McCollum vs. Massey, (2 Bail., 606,) cited by the appellant, is different. The order was set aside at a subsequent term, and by another Judge, although the defendant had failed to comply with the terms on which the first order was granted.

In the case of McDermaid vs. Earnest, (4 Strob., 192,) also relied on by the appellant, the motion to set aside a nonsuit had been refused in the Court below.

In the opinion by O’Neall, J., who had delivered the opinion in McCollum vs. Massey, it is said “that no Court has the power to set aside a nonsuit properly ordered without the consent of the party in whose favor it is rendered is the plain inference from McCollum vs. Massey & McNeill.”

Most of the Judges concurred in the opinion; but Wardlaw, J., while he concurred in the result, adds: “I think it material to observe that the regular term of the Court had expired before the motion to set aside the nonsuit was made. It will be observed, therefore, that the same material distinction as in McCollum vs. Massey exists between McDermaid vs. Earnest and the present case, viz., that the motions in those cases were made after the expiration of the term, while in this case the motion was made during the term. The term is, by legal supposition, but one day, and judgments are entered upon the rising of the Court. Until the Court rises, all proceedings of the Court remain under its control. The order of nonsuit is preliminary to a judgment. The judgment is not until it has been rendered, and it is within the discretionary power of the Judge to review his own orders during that time.”

In Browning vs. Huff, (2 Bail., 179,) the opinion, per O’Neall, J., says: “In eases like the present, it has been a long and well-settled practice to allow a plaintiff, when evidence essential to support the [332]*332issue had been omitted accidentally, or from supposing that before the Court sufficient, to adduce it, even after the evidence had been closed, a motion for non-suit made and argued, and even the opinion of the presiding Judge pronounced in favor of the motion. The application of this rule of practice must always be left to the discretion of the presiding Judge.”

It is true that the same Judge, in Poole vs. Mitchell, (1 Hill, 404,) a case precisely similar to Browning vs. Muff, does say in reference to the latter case “ but the order was not made.” The expression, however, determines nothing, for that was not a question in either case. The words are only used to narrate the case, and there is nothing in it to show distinction drawn between an utterance ore tenus and an expression in writing by a Judge on the bench; for after a decision ore tenus the order is signed as a matter of course, and that was exactly the present ease. “The Court said the plaintiffs had failed to make out their case, and therefore not properly in Court; there had been no proof to sustain the money counts.” Exception was taken. The order was subsequently signed, and the Court allowed a motion to be made to set it aside and heard argument.

The case of Mooney vs. Welsh, (1 Mill. Con. Rep., 133,) goes very far — applies this doctrine even to final judgments, and is a leading authority. In it the Court says: “The Court of Common Pleas, under all its modifications, has always exercised the power of looking into its records, and, on motion, affording that remedy after judgment has been entered up which is obtained by writ of error in the English Courts, and we think it has very wisely done so.”

The motion in that case was made to set aside a judgment because it exceeded the damages laid in the writ, although it did accord with the verdict. Not only was this motion granted, but the Court went further and reduced the judgment to the sum sworn to by the plaintiff in his affidavit to hold the defendant to bail. The opinion concludes: “The Court thinks that this motion was properly made in the Circuit Court and that it ought to have been sustained there.” In the English Courts it was once held that nonsuit could not be set aside, though occasioned by the mistake of the Judge. “ But in Sadler vs. Evans, (Burr., 1986,) the Court were unanimous, both upon principles and authorities, that where a Judge at nisi prius nonsuits the plaintiff, and is mistaken, the Court, upon motion, may set aside the nonsuit, and this is now the settled practice in both [333]*333Courts.” — Sellon’s Practice, p. 465. And writs of error are constantly sued out upon judgments on nonsuits. There is a wide difference, too, between the order or judgment of nonsuit and the solemn judgment of the Court on the trial of a cause. As is remarked by Judge Harper in MeEwen vs. Maeyek & Bell, (3 Rich., 210,): “ It is said that a nonsuit granted in invitum, according to our practice, must be regarded as a determination on a demurrer to evidence. This is not precisely so. A judgment on a demurrer to evidence, according to the English practice, is final and a bar to any future action. We do not regard the judgment of nonsuit as a bar — it determines nothing.” It merely decides that the plaintiff has failed to make out his case. If it be shown to the Court that he can supply the missing evidence, or properly amend the pleadings to conform to the evidence, by the cases already cited, and as expressed by Bay, J., in Campbell & Milliken vs. Ingraham, (1 Mill. Con. Rep., 293,) the Court, “in furtherance of justice, gives leave to examine the witness.”

If cause can be shown to the Judge during the same term, but subsequent to an order of nonsuit, there seems no good reason why he should not, in the same exercise of discretion, set aside a previous order which affects no rights and grant leave to supply the evidence or to amend.

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Related

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38 N.Y. 206 (New York Court of Appeals, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.C. 330, 1878 S.C. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chichester-co-v-hastie-sc-1878.