Depass v. Broad River Power Co.

176 S.E. 325, 173 S.C. 387, 95 A.L.R. 545, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 25, 1934
Docket13909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 176 S.E. 325 (Depass v. Broad River Power Co.) 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
Depass v. Broad River Power Co., 176 S.E. 325, 173 S.C. 387, 95 A.L.R. 545, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 168 (S.C. 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice StabeEr.

This case was first heard at the December, 1933, term of the Court, and thereafter the following opinion — here made a part of this opinion — was filed, in which the judgment below was reversed and a new trial ordered:

The plaintiff brought this action in the Richland County Court, alleging, inter alia, that on September 7, 1932, he applied to the defendants for gas and electric service at his residence, 3313 Monroe Street in the City of Columbia, tendering to them at the time the deposit required under their rules and regulations; that they willfully refused to accept the deposit and to furnish the service demanded, unless he would pay to them $20.32, the balance of an old bill charged against him, as trustee, for gas and for electric current furnished by the defendants at 2208 Clark Street and used by a tenant of the plaintiff; and also the payment of $6.06, the balance of a bill “charged in the name of the plaintiff, but in reality against plaintiff’s wife who owned the premises at 1907 Pendleton Street, neither of which bills were owed by the plaintiff personally.” The prayer was (1) for a writ of mandamus requiring the defendants to fur- *390 nish the gas and electric service demanded, and (2) for actual and punitive damages in the sum of $2,999.00.

A rule was issued by the County Judge, requiring the defendants to show cause why they should not furnish the plaintiff the gas and electric service asked for. The defendant Broad River Power Company, by way of return and answer, alleged that the “Associated Gas & Electric System is merely a name for the association of certain utility companies and is not a legal entity”; but admitted that the Broad River Power Company is in the business of furnishing electric energy and gas to the citizens of Columbia and vicinity. It also admitted that the plaintiff had made application for gas and electric service at 3313 Monroe Street in the City of Columbia, and in accordance with the defendant’s rules and regulations had “offered a $5.00 deposit for electricity and another $5.00 deposit for gas,” but alleged: “That defendant refused to accept the deposit or give the plaintiff electric or gas service until the plaintiff paid two certain accounts then outstanding against him, one for electric and the other for gas service at 2208 Clark Street in the sum of $20.32 covered by electric and gas contracts entered into between A. C. DePass individually as owner of the premises and the defendant, the one being dated August 31st, 1929, and the other November 4th, 1930, and also a balance of $6.06 for gas and electric service furnished to plaintiff at 1907 Pendleton Street under contract dated April 15th, 1932, signed by the plaintiff individually as owner of the premises. That these three contracts between the plaintiff and defendant were entered into by plaintiff individually as owner of the premises on account of which no deposit was required or taken, and that at no time until the application for service at Monroe Street did plaintiff ever claim that two of the contracts were with him as trustee, and that the other contract for 1907 Pendleton Street was for service on premises owned by his wife.”

Upon a hearing of the matter, Judge Whaley, on September 14, 1932, granted the writ; and while the Court’s order *391 was promptly complied with by the defendant Broad River Power Company, notice of intention to appeal therefrom was duly served.

There were two trials of the case. On the first, the Court directed a verdict for the defendant as to punitive damages, but instructed the jury to find for the plaintiff actual damages, leaving the amount to be fixed by them. A verdict for $5.00 was returned, which, upon plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, was set aside on the ground of “inadequacy.” From the Court’s order no formal notice of intention to appeal was given.

Upon the second trial, Judge Whaley again directed a verdict for the plaintiff for actual damages, leaving the amount to be fixed by the jury, but refused to direct a verdict for the defendant as to punitive damages, submitting that question to the jury, also. There was a verdict for the plaintiff for $600.00 actual and $2,399.00 punitive damages. On defendant’s motion for a new trial, the presiding Judge reduced the actual damages to $300.00, but permitted the verdict for punitive damages to stand as rendered. The Broad River Power Company excepts and brings error.

The exceptions raise a number of questions, but the following only are emphasized by appellant in its argument: (1) Error on the part of the trial Judge in granting the order of mandamus; (2) error in refusing to direct a verdict as to punitive damages on the second trial; (3) error in refusing to allow an appeal from his order granting plaintiff a new trial and, accordingly, settling the case for appeal so as to leave out all reference to the first trial and the order granting a new trial; (4) error in granting a new trial on plaintiff’s motion following the first trial of the case; and (5) error in not submitting to the jury under proper instruction whether the account due and owing the defendant by the plaintiff was recent.”

I. It appears that the granting of the writ of mandamus by the County Judge was based mainly upon the word “re *392 cent” used with reference to a past-due bill in Poole v. Paris Mt. Water Company, 81 S. C., 438, 62 S. E., 874, 877, 128 Am. St. Rep., 923. In that case, which involved the matter of a disputed claim, the Court announced the following rule: “While a public service water company has the right to cut off a consumer’s water supply for nonpayment of recent and just bills for water rents, and may refuse to engage to furnish further supply until said bills are paid, the right cannot be exercised so as to coerce the consumer into paying a bill which is unjust, or which the consumer in good faith and with show of reason disputes, by denying him such a prime necessity of life as water, when he offers to comply with the reasonable rules of the company as to such supply for the current term.” (Italics added.)

Judge Whaley in his decree calls especial attention to the use of the phrase “recent and just bills,” and cites later decisions of the Court in which the rule laid down in the Poole case is quoted with approval. He then states that “for the purposes of this writ only I hold that a bill standing for a year and four months is not a recent bill.”

The appellants contend that neither the Poole case, nor any case following it, has held that a public utility must accept as a customer one who is admittedly indebted to it because the claim is more than a year old, and points to the following holding of the Court in the Poole case as showing that the age of the bill in no way affected the Court’s decision : “The inconvenience arising from subj ecting the water company to the necessity of resorting to the regular Courts to collect disputed claims is not to be compared to the hardship of the consumer, as a member of the public, involved in permitting the water company to be judge in its own cause, and to coerce the disputant into submission by denying him water.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 S.E. 325, 173 S.C. 387, 95 A.L.R. 545, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/depass-v-broad-river-power-co-sc-1934.