Finley v. Cudd

20 S.E. 32, 42 S.C. 121, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 32 (Finley v. Cudd) 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
Finley v. Cudd, 20 S.E. 32, 42 S.C. 121, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 29 (S.C. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice McIver.

It appears that the plaintiff had given a lien on his crop for the year 1891 to the defendants to secure advances, and some time in the latter part of that year an arrangement was entered into between the parties whereby the defendants were to take up a mortgage then past due, held by one Mitchell, on a mare and colt belonging to plaintiff, with the understanding that if the plaintiff would gather his crops and apply the same to the lien held by defendants, they would indulge him for the balance due on the Mitchell mortgage until the fall of 1892. Soon after the Mitchell mortgage was transferred to defendants, they, alleging that plaintiff was neglecting to gather his crop and permitting the same bo waste in the field, seized the crop under a warrant to enforce the lien, and about the same time obtained possession of the mare and colt covered by the Mitchell mortgage, and sold the same under said mortgage. Exactly how the defendants obtained possession of this [123]*123mortgaged property was one of the disputed questions of fact in the case, the plaintiff claiming that the same was seized by one Holt, as the agent of the defendants, under the mortgage, while the defendants claimed that the plaintiff voluntarily delivered the mare and colt to them.

Thereupon this action was brought to recover the possession of the mare and colt, plaintiff insisting that under the arrangement made with the defendants at the time they obtained an assignment of the Mitchell mortgage, the plaintiff was entitled to retain the possession of the animals until the fall of 1892. The defendants, on the other hand, insisted that by reason of the plaintiff’s breach of the agreement to gather his crops and apply the same to the debt secured by the agricultural lien, they were not bound to wait until the fall of 1892, before enforcing the payment of the balance due on the Mitchell mortgage, but were justified in proceeding immediately to do as they had done. The defendants in their answer set up a counter-claim for the balance due them under the agricultural lien as well as a balance due them on a mortgage given by plaintiff to one Floyd, which had been assigned to defendants. To this counter-claim the plaintiff demurred, and his demurrer was sustained and the counter-claim was stricken out. The testimony adduced, which is set out' in the “Case,” was conflicting, especially as to who first violated the agreement mentioned above, and in the course of the testimony the defendants, against the objection of the plaintiff, were allowed to prove what was the total amount due to them by the plaintiff, the Circuit Judge ruling that such-testimony was admissible in mitigation of damages.

The Circuit Judge, in the outset of his charge, seems to have treated the case as if it was an action by the plaintiff to recover damages from the defendants for their violation of the agreement, not to foreclose their mortgage on the mare and colt until the fall of 1892; whereas, the true nature of the action seems to have been to recover possession of the mare and colt, together with damages for the alleged unlawful seizure and detention thereof. When counsel for plaintiff called the attention of the court to this miscouception of the nature of the action, and offered to allow the case to be considered as an ac[124]*124tion for damages simply, counsel for defendants declined the offer, aud the Circuit Judge then proceeded to instruct the jury that in an action for the recovery of personal property, the form of the verdict was prescribed by statute, and used these words: “The form of your verdict will be: we find for the plaintiff the possession of the property in dispute, and if possession cannot be bad, then so many dollars the value thereof, and so many dollars damages. In that event, you would not calculate at all the loss of the animals as any part of the damages, but you would value the use of the animals for the year, and return that value as the value of the animals on the limited title that the plaintiff alleged that he had. As I understand the complaint, it is for the use of the property for one year, aud then whatever damages you think the plaintiff would be entitled to. If you find for the defendants, you simply say you find for the defendants.” The jury returned the following verdict: “We find for the defendants,” and judgment having been entered thereon, the plaintiff appeals upon the several grounds set out in the record.

1 The first, second, and third exceptions, in different forms, impute error to the Circuit Judge in admitting the testimony of defendants showing the amount due by the plaintiff to the defendants, “in mitigation of damages.” After the demurrer to the counter-claim had been sustained, we do not see any ground upon which such testimony could have been admitted, as it certainly was in no way relevant to any of the issues in the action. While it is ordinarily true, that an error in admitting irrelevant testimony will not constitute a ground for a new trial, yet, if it appears that the admission of such testimony tends to mislead the jury, then it does become an error of which this court can take notice. If, as the Circuit Judge instructed the jury, the plaintiff, if entitled to recover at all, could only recover the value of the use of the animals for one year, which some of the witnesses placed as low as tweuty-five dollars, and if the testimony in question was admissible in mitigation of damages, the jury may have supposed that the plaintiff had really sustained no real damage at all, for the testimony objected to showed that the plaintiff [125]*125still owed the defendants the sum of seventy-seven dollars. It seems to us, therefore, that the admission of this testimony tended to mislead the jury, and prejudice the plaintiff.

The fourth and fifth grounds of appeal were not pressed in the argument here, and need not be considered, especially as we are satisfied that they could not be sustained.

2 The sixth ground of appeál imputes error to the Circuit Judge in charging the jury as follows: “The form of your verdict will be, ‘we find for the plaintiff the possession of the property in dispute, and if possession cannot be had, then so many dollars the value thereof, and so many dollars damages. In that event, you would not calculate at all the loss of the animals as any part of the damages, but yo.u would value the use'of the animals for that year, and return the value as the value of the animals on the limited title that the plaintiff alleged he had.’ ” Before proceeding to discuss this exception upon its merits, it is proper to notice an objection to its consideration at all, which has been interposed by counsel for respondent, to wit: that the exception is simply a quotation from the judge’s charge, and does not point out any specific error. It is true, that this court has taken occasion in several cases to condemn this mode of stating an exception; and, very possibly, if there was no other error in this case, it would not be considered. But, as the case has to go back anyhow, we will not decline to consider the point which was, doubtless, intended to be made by this exception, as it may save another appeal.

3 This point, as we gather from the argument of counsel, is, that there was error in directing the jury, in estimating the value of the animals, to confine their estimate to the value of the use of the animals for a year, without regard to their absolute value as property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 32, 42 S.C. 121, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-cudd-sc-1894.