Ferguson v. Harrison

13 S.E. 332, 34 S.C. 169, 1891 S.C. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 17, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 13 S.E. 332 (Ferguson v. Harrison) 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
Ferguson v. Harrison, 13 S.E. 332, 34 S.C. 169, 1891 S.C. LEXIS 36 (S.C. 1891).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Jústice McIver.

The plaintiffs, as existing creditors of the defendant, John H. Harrison, brought this action to set-aside an alleged voluntary deed to his wife, and also certain mortgages made by the wife to the defendants, Samuel E. Harrison and Richard Harrison, brothers of said John H. Harrison, under the allegation that the same were made with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of John H. Harrison. The defendants answered, denying all fraud, and alleging that the deed to the wife was made upon the understanding that she would secure the two brothers in the claims they held against her husband, and was not, in fact, without consideration ; and the mortgagees demanded that their mortgages should be foreclosed.

The case being at issue and on the docket for three terms, [171]*171when it was called for trial at the third term, the defendants, John H. Harrison and his wife, moved for a continuance, upon the ground of the sickness of some of their children, though no affidavits to that effect were presented. The motion to continue was resisted by the plaintiffs, who insisted “that some progress should be made, as this was the third term on the calendar, and these defendants were destroying the value of the mortgaged premises, already scant security, by cutting, sawing, and selling off the lumber. An order of reference was then suggested by plaintiffs’ attorneys. The questions involved were then stated by the respective counsel. Plaintiffs moved for an order, of reference. No written notice of this motion,' or affidavit in support thereof, was submitted, the motion being based upon what wms stated in open court. The counsel for John H. and Nannie E. Harrison stated that they objected to a reference. The attorneys for Samuel E. and Richard Harrison neither consented nor objected to the order of reference, but stated that they were willing to unite with the other defendants in any course they might pursue. Judge Aldrich stated that it ivas such a case as was referable under the Code, that the plaintiffs were entitled to a trial, but under the circumstances he would not force them to an immediate trial; that he would, during the term, either try the case himself, or refer it, if these defendants did not wish to leave their children. The attorneys for John H. and Nannie E. Harrison said that their clients did not wish to come away from their children again ; again urged a continuance, and refused to consent to a reference. Thereupon the judge stated that he would not continue the case, and passed an order of reference in the following words: “On hearing the pleadings in this case, it is ordered that it be referred to the master to take the testimony in this case and report the same to the court, together with his conclusions of law and fact.”

From this order defendants appeal, upon the several grounds set out in the record, which impute error to the Circuit Judge in granting this order, for the several reasons suggested therein, which will be hereinafter stated and considered. While there is no such statement in the record as prepared for argument here, yet the fact is conceded in the “Brief” presented by appellant’s [172]*172counsel, that respondent’s counsel served on appellants a notice “that they will ask the court to sustain the order upon the ground that the same is not appealable,” and hence we are at liberty, as we would not otherwise be, to consider that question.

1 Section 11 of the Code specifies the cases in which an appeal may be taken to this court, as tv ell from a final judgment as an intermediate order. It is very dear that the order under consideration is not appealable under subdivision (3) of that section, for that relates to an order made in a special proceeding. It is eo^ally clear that it does not fall under subdivision (2), for that relates to orders which must not only affect a substantial right, but must in effect determine the action, &c., and as no such effect can be attributed to the order in question, it certainly cannot be appealable under that subdivision. Garlington v. Copeland, 25 S. C., 41. If, therefore, it is appealable at all, it must be under subdivision (1) of that section, which gives the right of appeal from an intermediate order “involving the merits.” What is the precise meaning of the words just quoted has never, so far as we know, been distinctly determined. Butin the case of Blakeley v. Frazier (11 S. C., 122), it was held that whenever a substantial right of a party to an action, material to obtaining a judgment, is denied, this subdivision of section 11 secures the right of appeal to this court; and, as we suppose, the mode of trial, whether by the court, by a referee or master, or by a jury, is a matter material to obtaining a judgment, it follows that where a party is denied the mode of trial to which he is entitled by law, and required by an order to submit to some other mode of trial, such order is appealable.

2 While, therefore, every order of reference is not appealable, yet there are some which are. To determine, therefore, whether the order in question is appealable, it is necessary to inquire, as in DuPont v. DuBos (33 S. C., 389), whether any substantial legal right of the appellants has been denied by referring all the issues in the action to the master. The first objection to the order, raised by the grounds of appeal, is that it was granted without previous notice that such order would be applied for. We have not been cited to any law, and we do not know of any, which requires notice in a case like the present.

[173]*1733 The second objection is, that “no sufficient showing was made as to whether or no it was such a cause as could be referred to the master without consent of all parties.” The Circuit Judge had before him the pleadings in the cause, copies of which are set out in the “Case,” and they were quite sufficient to show what was the nature of the case — that it was one of purely equitable cognizance, involving no issues which either party had the right to trial by jury, and hence we see nothing in this objection. Bouland v. Carpin, 27 S. C., 235. Besides, it is stated in the “Case” that the questions involved were stated by the respective counsel; and surely, with the pleadings before him and these statements of counsel, the Circuit Judge had the fullest means of ascertaining the nature of the case and the character of the issues involved.

4 The next objection seems to be that the judge erred in referring the issues of law as well as of fact to the master, even if it were a proper case for reference without consent. The Code certainly contains no such limitation on the right to order a reference. On the contrary, section 292 expressly provides that “all or any of the issues in the action, whether of fact, or law, or both, may be referred,” &c., where the parties consent, or, in certain specified cases, presently to be considered, when the parties do not consent. We suppose, therefore, that the real point of this objection will be found in the third ground of appeal, where it is claimed that, inasmuch as the trial would “require the decision of difficult questions of law,” the Circuit Judge had no power to refer any of the issues under the special exception contained in section 293.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.E. 332, 34 S.C. 169, 1891 S.C. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-harrison-sc-1891.