Floyd v. C.I.T. Corporation

5 S.E.2d 299, 191 S.C. 518, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 1, 1939
Docket14953
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 S.E.2d 299 (Floyd v. C.I.T. Corporation) 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
Floyd v. C.I.T. Corporation, 5 S.E.2d 299, 191 S.C. 518, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 114 (S.C. 1939).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

*520 Plaintiff brought his action by the service of a complaint which alleged a single cause of action demanding damages in the sum of $3,000.00 on account of the facts, or the incident, set out in the complaint. Defendant moved that plaintiff be required to make his complaint more definite and certain by separating the three causes of action which appellant alleged were jumbled in the complaint. The motion was granted and in due time the amended complaint was served, in which were stated to be three causes of action. Thereupon, the appellant moved that respondent be required to elect upon which of the three causes of action he would go to trial, and that the two causes of action not elected be dismissed. Appellant further moved that if such election be not ordered, then that the second and third causes of action be dismissed and the respondent be limited to the first cause of action. Appellant also demurred to the third cause of action on the ground that it showed no legal injury inflicted upon the respondent and no damages sustained by the respondent as the result of any legal injury. The motion was refused and the demurrer overruled. Hence, this appeal.

There are five exceptions, which appellant holds in its brief to state three questions for consideration, viz.:

“I. The demurrer to the thirl cause of action should have been sustained because it shows no injury to or damage sustained by the respondent (Exceptions Nos. 1 and 2).
“II. The respondent should have been required to elect upon which of the three causes of action stated in the complaint he will proceed, and the suit should have been dismissed as to the other two causes of action (Exceptions Nos. 2, 3, 5 and 6).
“III. The facts set forth in the second cause of action do not show trespass to real estate, as held by the opinion of the lower Court (Exception 4).”

Upon the argument of the motion it appears that respondent’s counsel suggested in argument that appellant had asked that the causes of action be separated *521 and now objected to the separation. This is not, as appellant’s counsel suggest, “sound criticism,” They say: “ * * * We are not here objecting to the separation of the causes of action; we are raising at the first available time the point that the separate causes of action cannot be joined in a single complant, because (1) All three causes of action are founded upon the same incident, and give rise to only a single cause of action, in which damages cannot be recovered for loss of the wife’s services and for assault and for trespass. (2) The third cause of action, relating to the loss of services of the respondent’s wife, on the facts stated, shows no legal injury to or damage suffered by the respondent, and (3) the respondent should be required to inform the appellant in advance whether this case will be tried before a jury as an action for assault, or as one for trespass.”

In the order of Judge Sharkey, on the motion to make the complaint more definite and certain-by separating the several causes of action, from which there is no appeal, he said:

“It appears to me that the defendant’s motion to make the complaint more certain and definite by separating the several causes of action that may be deduced therefrom is the sound method of requiring the plaintiff to put the defendant on notice of just what character of case the plaintiff intends to make before the jury.
“ * * * Just as it is impossible for the defendant to know the precise cause of action upon which the plaintiff intends to rely, as the complaint is now drawn, so it is equally impossible for this Court to pass upon the propriety of some of the allegations of the complaint which the defendant seeks to have stricken out, so long as the complaint remains susceptible of construction of setting up several causes of action of a character that are wholly dissimilar.”

This prelude brings us to the consideration of the issue in the case, the solution of which, in our judgment, is decisive of the whole case.

*522 Has plaintiff split a single cause of action into three causes of action? If so, his complaint is fatally defective in that shape.

The rule is thus stated in Bliss on Code Pleading, page 155, Section 118, et seq.: “It is a rule that one cause of action — as, one springing from a single contract — cannot be so split as to authorize more than one action ; and the same rule would make it improper to so divide a single cause of action, by separate statements in one complaint, as to show more than one cause of action.”

The same author says in the same section: “Logically, every wrong furnishes itself a cause of action, but different wrongs may be so blended as to be called a single wrong, as to furnish but a single cause of action, especially with reference to the policy of the law, which discourages a multiplicity of suits. A distinguished common-law Judge in New York says: rAll damages arising from a single wrong, though at different times, make but one cause of action; and all debts and demands already due by the same contract make one entire cause of action.’ ” (Italics added.)

Let us analyze the complaint in this action by the above-stated rule.

Paragraphs II and III of the first cause of action of the amended complaint state that:

“II. That on or about August 16, 1938, at about 3 :00 P. M., one Harper, the agent of the Defendant C. I. T. Corporation, came to the plaintiff’s home at Aynor, S. C., and asked if the plaintiff had any money for him to- catch up his payments on his car which was financed through the Defendant, the said Harper at the time acting about the business of and within the scope of his duties for the Defendant C. I. T. Corporation, whereupon the plaintiff informed the said agent that his wife had made a payment of Twenty ($20.00) Dollars to the Defendant a few days before.
“III. That the Defendant’s agent Harper thereupon told the plaintiff that no such payment had been made and ac *523

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E.2d 299, 191 S.C. 518, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-cit-corporation-sc-1939.