Cooper-Smith Co. v. Bell

134 S.E. 658, 137 S.C. 1, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 1, 1926
Docket12076
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 134 S.E. 658 (Cooper-Smith Co. v. Bell) 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
Cooper-Smith Co. v. Bell, 134 S.E. 658, 137 S.C. 1, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 171 (S.C. 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Coti-iran.

These cases were tried together on circuit in this Court. Each is an action upon an account for goods sold and delivered. The account against R. D. Bell is $1,123.72; against Della Bell as administratrix of the estate of J. L. Bell, $1,212.50; and against O. J. Bell, $894.92. The accounts are dated prior to January 1, 1921. The cases depend upon precisely the same facts and involve the same *3 principles of law. For convenience therefore we will consider the case of R. R. Bell.

On January 1, 1921, R. R. Bell owed the plaintiff quite a large account and plaintiff was pressing. On February 8, 1921, he had stored in the Planter’s Warehouse, of Conway, 25 bales of cotton, for which he had received from the warehouse company some kind of a receipt. It is not set forth in the record and appears to have been an exceedingly informal receipt, ticket, or stub. On that day he delivered it to Cooper-Smith Company, the plaintiff, and received from them a paper in form as follows:

“February 8, 1921. Received of Mr. R. R. Bell, of Wampee, S. C., twenty-five (25) cotton receipts, representing twenty-five bales of cotton as stored in the Planter’s Warehouse, at Conway, S. C.; this cotton to Cooper-Smith Company of Conway, S. C., as collateral on his account.

Cooper-Smith Company,

By M. R. Smith.”

On May 3, 1921, without advertisement and without the written consent of Bell, the plaintiff sold the cotton represented by the foregoing receipt to one J. C. Spivey at private sale for 7.58 cents per pound, and credited the account of R. R. Bell with the net proceeds of sale, $863.35, leaving a balance unpaid, as stated above, of $1,123.72.

The complaint was in the usual form for goods sold and delivered. The answer alleged the pledge of the cotton, that it had been unlawfully sold and converted, and that this unlawful sale and conversion operated as a satisfaction of the debt sued upon.

At the close of the testimony the defendant moved for a directed verdict in his favor upon the ground that the cotton pledged as security had not been advertised and sold in accordance with law. The motion was refused. After the charge of the presiding Judge, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,294.02 (reduced on motion for new trial to $1,250.07), which represented the *4 balance due on account with interest. The defendant has appealed.

It appears that the circuit Judge held that the pledge of the warehouse receipts amounted to an oral pledge of the cotton in the warehouse, and that as an oral pledge the transaction did not come within the terms of Section 5628, Vol. 3, Code of 1922, requiring advertisement and sale at public outcry. His position is sought to be maintained by the plaintiff's counsel under the case of Sellers v. Hancock, 42 S. C., 40; 20 S. E., 13. The Section referred to is as follows:

“When any personal property under pledge, mortgage'or hypothecation is to be sold for the purpose of satisfying the loan or debt secured by such pledge, mortgage or hypothecation, -the pledgee, mortgagee or person holding the instrument showing the hypothecation shall advertise the time and place of said sale by posting a notice thereof, in writing, at least fifteen (15) days before such sale in three (3) public places in the county in which such personal property may be found, one of which shall be the courthouse door, or shall publish the same at least two weeks in a newspaper published in his County, unless the person making such pledge, mortgage or hypothecation, or his legal representative shall consent, or shall have consented, to a sale in some other mode or at some other notice, such consent to be expressed in writing.”

We are not at all satisfied with the decision in Sellers v. Hancock, supra. The idea that the Section applies only to written pledges appears to have been based upon the words, “holding the instrument.” Considering the object to be accomplished by the act, the duty of protecting a pledge, whether oral or in writing, and the rights of the pledgor, we are justified in imposing a strict construction upon the phrase quoted. Grammatically it refers only to hypothecation. We think therefore that an oral pledge of personal property is as much within the *5 protection of the act as a written hypothecation; that Sellers v. Hancock is wrongly decided and should be overruled, particularly as a contrary view manifestly controlled the Court’s decisions in later cases of Tolbert v. Touche, 118 S. C., 141; 110 S. E., 115, Tolbert v. Pooshe, 124 S. C., 166; 117 S. E., 354, Tolbert v. Pouche, 129 S. C., 338; 123 S. E., 859, and Haselden v. Hamer, 97 S. C., 178; 81 S. E., 424.

But even if Sellers v. Hancock be allowed to stand as authority, the warehouse receipts, coupled with the receipt which the plaintiff gave to the defendant, constituted a written pledge of the cotton as collateral security.

The most serious question is the effect of the private sale by the plaintiff of the cotton without complying with the mandatory directions of Section 5628. It unquestionably constituted a conversion of the property, unless the conduct of the defendant amounted to a waiver of his rights under the statute. This question of fact must be submitted to a jury.

The effect of the conversion, in the absence of waiver or estoppel on the part of the defendant, is the accountability of the plaintiff for the value of the cotton either as of the market price at the time of the conversion, or as of any price above that up to the highest price reached by the cotton market between the date of the sale and the date of the trial of the case. The jury would not, of course, give a less sum than the value of the property at the time it was converted, and could not give a verdict tor a sum greater than the highest value reached up to the time of the trial, but within this limitation the finding is within the discretion of the jury, controlled by the justice of the case, and subject to correction by the trial Judge for caprice or injustice. Carter v. Du Pre, 18 S. C., 179 Gregg v. Bank of Columbia, 72 S. C., 458; 52 S. E., 195; 110 Am. St. Rep., 633. Davis v. Reynolds, 91 S. C., 439; 74 S. E., 827. *6 A brief, interesting discussion of the measure of damages is found in the last-named case at page 442 (74 S. E., 828), from which it appears that the jury would, not be justified in allowing the highest price, where the conversion was “made under a bona fide claim of right, without grievous wrong or oppression, and it appeared reasonably certain the plaintiff would have sold about the time of the conversion.”

The defendant contends that, assimilated to the rule in cases where the mortgagee of chattels has taken possession and sold them in violation of Section 5628 (Fowler v. Goldsmith, 131 S. C., 119; 126 S. E., 431, and cases cited therein, the conversion of the cotton amounted to a satisfaction of the debt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.E. 658, 137 S.C. 1, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-smith-co-v-bell-sc-1926.