Dinkins v. Robbins

21 S.E.2d 10, 200 S.C. 475, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 26, 1942
Docket15434
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 21 S.E.2d 10 (Dinkins v. Robbins) 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
Dinkins v. Robbins, 21 S.E.2d 10, 200 S.C. 475, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 85 (S.C. 1942).

Opinion

*478 The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. ChiEE Justice Boni-iam.

This action in claim and delivery was instituted by Mrs. Frances M. Dinkins for the recover)' of possession of a certain described LaSalle automobile or its value, and also sought judgment against the defendant, S. L. Robbins, for $10,000.00 actual and punitive damages.

The complaint alleged that on August 16, 1941, a deputy from the office of the defendant, J. E. Gamble, sheriff, took possession of plaintiff’s above described property for and on behalf of the defendant, S. L- Robbins, while the automobile was parked in the town of Manning, South Carolina, and that the defendant, J. E. Gamble, refused to surrender the vehicle to plaintiff despite evidence submitted to him as to her ownership thereof; and that the unlawful and willful seizure and retention of said property had damaged her in the above sum.

The defendants, by way of answer, alleged that the defendant, J. E. Gamble, as Sheriff of Clarendon County, levied upon and took possession of the said automobile as the property of V. R. Dinkins, husband of plaintiff, pursuant to a judgment in favor of S. L. Robbins, dated March 25, 1941, and execution thereon (dated May 20, 1941) against the said V. R. Dinkins, who had recently purchased the automobile and used it daily in his business, and that a license for it had been issued to him. The defendants alleged further that after the execution had been issued in favor of S. L- Robbins, Mr. and Mrs. Dinkins had collusively conspired and schemed to prevent the sheriff from levying upon the property of V. R. Dnkins, thus preventing S. L- Robbins from collecting his judgment, and that in pursuance of such conspiracy, the registration of the State Highway Department was surreptitiously procured to be unlawfully changed, and that efforts were made to get the dealer óf said automobile to change his records, and that as a part of such scheme, the plaintiff filed a deed conveying to her the land upon which her husband’s saw mill and planing mill were located, *479 and that she has now filed a claim to practically all of the machinery and appliances upon said premises, with the claim that they are fixtures attached to the freehold. Defendants further alleged that if the said automobile was transferred from the husband to his wife, such act was done for the purpose of enablng him to evade the collection of the judgment against him.

At the trial of the case before the Honorable Samuel Want, Special Judge, presiding, and a jury, the plaintiff, a school teacher, testified that she rode to her work in a school bus, but that an automobile was indispensable to her husband in his work; that she purchased this automobile from her husband, prior to which time he had owned a car himself all of the time, that after she bought the car from her husband, “he used it maybe a little over fifty per cent of the time” and that “in the morning if I wanted his — the other car I would tell him I wanted it.” The plaintiff’s husband testified that he drove back and forth from his home to his place of business (a distance of twenty or twenty-five miles) practically every day, that after he transferred the car to his wife he continued to drive it, although not every day; that prior to June 9, 1941, he owned an unincumbered 1937 La Salle automobile which, on said date, he traded to the Boyle Motor Company, of Sumter, in return for the 1939 model LaSalle automobile in dispute, the car which he purchased being valued at $900.00. On this purchase he was allowed about $400.00 on his old car, it being undisputed that such allowance represented his own property. In addition, he paid $200.00 by check and, on the above date, gave a chattel mortgage, due ten days thereafter, for $300.00. This trade was made less than three weeks after the date of the issuance of the above-named execution against him.

The record in the case reveals that on June 13, four days after his trade with the motor company,' Mr. Dinkins was served with a notice of the appointment of homestead appraisers in connection with the judgment against him in favor of S. L. Robbins. Ten days thereafter, on June 23, *480 as shown by the plaintiff’s exhibits, the chattel mortgage was transferred to Mrs. Dinkins, the plaintiff in this action, by the Boyle Motor Company, and on June 27, four days thereafter, the motor vehicle license for the disputed automobile was likewise transferred to plaintiff. The public records reveal that V. R. Dinkins had given.a purchase money mortgage on the disputed automobile, which was registered in his name prior to its transfer to his wife. The plaintiff testified upon cross examination that she bought the car from her husband about ten days after he bought it.

In addition to the disputed automobile, the plaintiff also testified that she owns a Cadillac automobile. ITer testimony also disclosed that her husband was in possession of the LaSalle automobile when it was levied upon, although he no longer owned an automobile in his own name. Upon cross examination plaintiff’s husband testified:

“Q. Do you own anything yourself, do you have anything that you call your own? A. No, I do not now.
“Q. You don’t have anything you call your own? A. Not today.
. “Q. How about before this judgment? A. Yes, I had property that was mine.”

The homestead was set off on August 6, 1941, and the property at the plant which Mr. Dinkins operated was levied upon the same day. Claims to this property were filed by various creditors and by Mrs. Dinkins as landlord entitled to fixtures attached to realty under an unrecorded deed, with reference to which the following colloquy took place during the trial upon cross examination of V. R. Dinkins:

“Q. You don’t know the name of the people who' owned the property that' you have got your mill site on, when your wife bought it? A. No.
“Q. When did she buy it? A. Nine or ten years ago.
“Q. In 1932, was it not? And she didn’t put her deed on record until 1941 ? A. Well, I think so.
“Q. Why ? A. Because there was not any necessity for it.”

*481 Throughout the trial, the presiding Judge strictly limited the testimony to transactions and instruments relating to the disputed automobile, while the appellants attempted to introduce testimony that the insolvent debtor, V. R. Din-kins, shortly before the rendition of the judgment against him, had committed other acts designed to defeat the judgment, and that in the proceeding brought to determine the priorities of the various claims to the machinery, Mrs.. Din-kins had claimed a part, and finally had attempted to amend her answer setting up a claim to all of the machinery and property at the plant. 'Testimony not directly connected with the disputed automobile was excluded, among other grounds, as being related only to collateral matters.

The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the return of the said automobile, or its value of $750.00, and against S. D. Robbins for $100.00 actual damages, and $200.00 punitive damages.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E.2d 10, 200 S.C. 475, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinkins-v-robbins-sc-1942.