Culler v. Hydrick

160 S.E. 731, 162 S.C. 253, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 22, 1930
Docket12904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 S.E. 731 (Culler v. Hydrick) 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
Culler v. Hydrick, 160 S.E. 731, 162 S.C. 253, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 140 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice StabrEr.

This action was brought on August 29, 1928, in the County Court of Orangeburg County, for specific performance of a contract of sale of certain real estate and for damages. The complaint is not set out in full in the record, but its substance is given in the agreed statement of fact. It is alleged that the defendant Hydrick, who was the owner of certain lots of land in the Town of'North, entered into a written agreement with the plaintiff, for a money consideration paid, to sell him the lots, this agreement being filed for record in the office of the Clerk of Court prior to August 28, 1928; that the plaintiff tendered the amount due thereon to that defendant, who refused and still refuses to convey the property to him; that Hydrick on August 20, 1928, for value, executed and delivered to the defendant Etheredge a title deed to these lots, this deed being recorded on August 28, 1928; and that Etheredge has attempted to go into possession of the lots, and is constructing or attempting to construct buildings thereon, although knowing of plaintiff’s *255 agreement to purchase them from Hydrick. It is also alleged “that the aforesaid acts on the part of Hydrick, acting in conjunction with Etheredge, in the attempt to defraud plaintiff out of the amount of the purchase price already paid for the said lot of land, and defraud him out of title thereto, were done willfully, wantonly and with intent to defraud plaintiff to his damages in the sum of One Thousand ($1,-000.00) Dollars.”

The prayer for relief is:

“1. Eor specific performance in having the defendant D. J. Hydrick to convey unto him the lots of land hereinabove described and set forth.
“2. To have the title of D. J. Hydrick to J. F. Etheredge conveying the property herein described, set aside and declared to be null and void and of none effect.
“3. For the sum of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars actual and punitive damages and for the costs of this action.”

On September 4, 1928, the defendant Hydrick moved that, as to him, the plaintiff be required to elect whether he would proceed “on the cause of action for specific performance, or for damages at law.” With regard to this motion, his Honor, Judge Moss, made the following order:

“The defendant, D. J. Hydrick, having moved before me for an order requiring plaintiff to elect which cause of action he shall pursue, that is to say, for the specific performance or for damages, now, after having heard the attorneys for the defendants and attorneys for plaintiff in this matter, it appears that plaintiff has elected to go to trial first on the cause of action for specific performance in this, therefore, it is,
“Ordered; That the plaintiff be, and he is hereby required to pursue his equitable remedy of specific performance first, herein without prejudice to any of his rights on his legal remedy for damages which may be pursued subsequent to an adjudication on the question of specific performance.”

*256 Three days later, the defendant Etheredge moved that, as to him, the plaintiff be required to elect whether he would proceed “on the cause of action for rescission of deed (Hydrick to Etheredge) or for damages at law.” The Court disposed of this motion as follows:

“The defendant, J. F. Etheredge having moved before me for an order requiring the plaintiff to elect which cause of action he shall pursue, that is to say, for the rescission of contract or for damages, now, after having heard the attorneys for defendants and attorneys for plaintiff in this matter, it appears that plaintiff has elected to go to trial first on the cause of action, for rescission of contract in this, therefore, it is
“Ordered, That the plaintiff be, and he is hereby required to pursue his equitable remedy of rescission of contract first, herein, without prejudice to any of his rights on his legal remedy for damages which may be pursued subsequent to-an adjudication on the question of rescission of contract.”

The defendants appeal and complain that the County Judge committed error, in that by his holding he deprived them of the benefit “of the doctrine of election of .remedies, which are available to plaintiff under the allegations of the complaint.” They rely upon the case of McMahan v. McMahon, 122 S. C., 336, 115 S. E., 293, 295, 26 A. L. R., 1295, quoting therefrom: “When either party to a contract for the sale of land has failed in his obligation, the other is entitled to the alternative remedy of specific performance in equity or damages at law.”

The respondent, conceding the correctness of this principle, contends that, although specific performance is sought, he is “entitled to be -compensated for the damages that have accrued in his favor by reason of the concurrent acts of the defendants in depriving him of the use of the lots, and also for the fraud by which they are depriving him of his rights in the matter.”

The question of “election of remedies” is so fully discussed in the McMahdn- case, supra, and in the more recent *257 case of Ebner v. Haverty Furniture Company, 138 S. C., 74, 136 S. E., 19, 20, where the Court emphasizes the-difference between “election of remediable rights” and “election of remedies,” that it is hardly necessary to do more than to refer to those cases.

In the Finer case, we find the following declaration: “There are two distinct conditions under which the plaintiff may be met with the objection of election of remedies: (1) Where he has alleged a certain state of facts and invoked a certain remedy, and later brings an action alleging an entirely different and repugnant state of facts and invokes a certain remedy different from that invoked in the first action; (2) where he has alleged a, certain state of facts and invoked a certain remedy, and later brings an action alleging the same facts as in the first action, and invokes a certain remedy different from the remedy invoked in the first action.”

With regard to the first condition, the Court said:

“The first condition, presents rather a case of ‘election of remediable rights,’ than a case of ‘election of remedies,’ although it is included in the general appellation of ‘election of remedies.’ A remediable right is a legal conclusion from a certain state of facts; a remedy is the appropriate legal form of relief by which that remediable right may be enforced.
“The first condition, the election of remediable rights, is based ‘upon the theory that a party cannot, in the assertion of his right occupy inconsistent positions in relation to the facts which form the basis of his respective remedies.’ ”

And on the same point, in the McMahan case:.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.E. 731, 162 S.C. 253, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culler-v-hydrick-sc-1930.