Ex parte Hart

195 S.E. 253, 186 S.C. 125
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 7, 1938
Docket14615
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 195 S.E. 253 (Ex parte Hart) 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
Ex parte Hart, 195 S.E. 253, 186 S.C. 125 (S.C. 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fishburne.

On June 2, 1937, the appellants, W. E. Bowen and Dakyns B. Stover, County Attorneys for the County of Green-ville, which is embraced within the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, made an ex parte application to his Honor, T. S. Sease, resident Circuit Judge of the adjoining Seventh Circuit, at his chambers in Spartanburg, for an order authorizing the payment of extra compensation to them as such attorneys, under Section 33 of the Greenville County Supply Act (Acts 1937, page 1071). The petition presented to Judge Sease was accompanied by an affidavit of Mr. Bowen, setting forth that Hon. G. Dewey Oxner, the resident Circuit Judge of the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, was then absent from his Circuit.

Upon this ex parte petition of the appellants, Judge Sease, after taking testimony offered in support of the allegations of the petition, and also upon the question of the reasonableness of the fee prayed for, passed an order authorizing the payment of $3,000.00 to each of the said petitioners. The order further provided “that said sum be forthwith paid to each of the petitioners by the Greenville County Supervisor, Board of County Commissioners and County Treasurer out of the contingent fund as provided in said Supply Act, in the same manner as salaries are paid to the public officials of the County upon the petitioners presenting their vouchers for same with a certified copy of this order attached.” Later in the day of June 2d, the petitioners, upon their return to Greenville from Spartanburg, learned that Judge Oxner was actually in his Circuit on that day. It ap[128]*128pears that Judge Oxner, in accordance with plans previously made by him, had intended to be away from his Circuit on June 2d; and upon inquiry, he had so advised the petitioners, but due to an unexpected change in his plans he did not leave the Thirteenth Circuit until early in the morning of June 3d. The petitioners, therefore, appeared before Judge Sease at his chambers at Spartanburg again on the following day (June 3d), and presented an affidavit reciting the above facts, and the further fact that Judge Oxner was absent that day from the Thirteenth Circuit, and that there was no other Circuit Judge presiding therein. Upon consideration of these facts, and without taking further testimony, his Honor, Judge Sease, then passed another order, bearing date June 3d, in which he specifically adopted and confirmed his order of June 2d, and declared it valid and of full force and effect. Both orders were duly filed in the County of Greenville, and thereafter the county paid the petitioners the fees therein provided for.

As stated, the petition presented to Judge Sease was ex parte. Neither the County of Greenville nor any person or board representing the county was made a party thereto.

On June 11, 1937, J. Ed. Hart, a citizen and taxpayer of Greenville County, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated, and the Greenville County Bar Association, co-petitioners (which association joined in the petition in accordance with a resolution passed by it, whose members, as shown by the petition, are likewise taxpayers of Green-ville County), presented their verified petition to his Honor, Judge Sease, at his chambers in Spartanburg, praying that a rule be issued by him requiring W. E. Bowen and Dakyns B. Stover, County Attorneys for Greenville County, to show cause why the orders dated June 2, 1937, and June 3, 1937, should not be declared void, vacated, and set aside, and for such other and further relief as may be proper in the premises. This petition denied the jurisdiction of the Court, upon the facts stated, to issue the aforesaid orders, and further challenged the validity of the orders upon the [129]*129ground that they were granted in proceedings wholly ex parte, without notice to Greenville County. The reasonableness of the fees allowed was also questioned. Upon consideration of this petition a rule was issued by Judge Sease, returnable before him on June 17, 1937, at his chambers at Spartanburg, requiring and directing Messrs. Bowen and Stover to show cause why the said orders should not be vacated, and adjudged null and void, and why the petitioners should not be granted the relief prayed for in their petition. In accordance with the order, a copy of the rule and petition, with accompanying affidavits, were duly served upon these attorneys, and also upon the secretary of the Greenville County Delegation, the chairman of the Board of County Commissioners of Greenville County, and on the Treasurer of Greenville County, each of whom was given leave to file a return to the petition. No returns, however, were filed by any of these county officials, except a formal return by the Treasurer, which merely stated that he had paid out the money pursuant to the orders referred to.

Messrs. Bowen and Stover, appellants here, filed their return, setting up several defenses.

At the hearing before Judge Sease on June 17th, counsel for the appellants objected to the jurisdiction of the Court, on the ground that it did not appear by affidavit, either at the time of the issuing of the rule, on June 11, 1937, or at the date of the hearing, on June 17, 1937, that the resident Judge of the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit (embracing Green-ville County) was out of the Circuit, and that there was no special or regular Judge presiding therein.

The record on appeal shows that “no affidavit was presented or filed by petitioners on June 11, 1937, when the rule to show cause was issued, or on June 17, 1937, when the hearing on the Rule to show cause and Petition was had, or at any other time, showing that the resident Judge of the thirteenth circuit was out of the circuit at either of said times, or that there was no other presiding circuit Judge therein, and no effort was^ made by petitioners to comply [130]*130with the statutory provision so as to give Judge Sease jurisdiction.”

The record likewise discloses that separate actions were commenced on July 9, 1937, by Greenville County against the appellants in the Court of Common Pleas for Green-ville County, alleging fraud and deceit in obtaining payment of the aforementioned fees, and demanding judgment thereabout. These actions are now pending.

The objection raised by the appellants to the jurisdiction of the Court was overruled. Judge Sease assumed jurisdiction, and, after hearing the matter, issued his order, reciting that he did not deem it necessary to consider the several defenses set up by the appellants; that the sole material question before him was whether the orders signed by him on June 2d and June 3d were valid. He held that they were not valid, and ordered that they be vacated and set aside. The order of the Circuit Judge was predicated upon the premise that as Judge Oxner was in the Thirteenth Circuit on June 2d, the order of that date was void for want of jurisdiction; and that the order of June 3d was invalid because it attempted to ratify, confirm, and make valid that which was void. -In this order of June 17th, Judge Sease made it clear that he had not been misled by the appellants as to any facts connected with the proceedings which constituted the basis for the issuance of the orders of June 2d and June 3d.

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Ex Parte Hart
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Bluebook (online)
195 S.E. 253, 186 S.C. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-hart-sc-1938.