Hardwick v. Page

117 S.E. 204, 124 S.C. 111, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 10, 1923
Docket11180
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 S.E. 204 (Hardwick v. Page) 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
Hardwick v. Page, 117 S.E. 204, 124 S.C. 111, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 103 (S.C. 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

Plaintiff’s action, commenced September 18, 1917, was predicated upon allegations in his complaint to the following effect: (1) That during the current year, 1917, he had worked a farm for the defendant under a laborer’s sharecropper agreement to plant and harvest a crop; (2) that he had planted certain crops and harvested a part thereof, out of the proceeds of which he had paid all of his indebtedness to the defendant, and that he had been willing and ready to harvest the remainder, consisting of 4 acres of corn and one-half acre of potatoes; (3) that on September 10, without his knowledge, the defendant had entered and gathered the 4 acres of corn before it was fully matured, and had stored it in his barns; (4) that “his (plaintiff’s) one-half” of the corn gathered by the defendant amounted to 50 bushels, of the value of $125, “all of which is justly due and owing this plaintiff by the defendant by reason of his said labor.” Thereupon a judgment was prayed for $125. The defendant answered, denying generally “every material allegation” of the complaint. Upon these pleadings the ca§e was tried. From judgment on verdict for the full amount claimed, $125, the defendant appeals.

The action was commenced in the month of September, about eight days after the defendant, the landowner or master, had gathered the corn. If the complaint which alleged no demand on the part of the plaintiff for a division *114 of the crop so harvested, and no refusal of the defendant to account for plaintiff’s share, stated any cause of action at all, the requisite allegation of a breach of legal duty must be referred to the very broad statement of the conclusion that the sum of $125 “was due and owing” the plaintiff for labor. The issue raised by defendant’s general denial, therefore, was whether, when the action was brought, the defendant owed the plaintiff for labor a sum then due, measured by the value of one-half of the corn, amounting- to $125.

The evidence disclosed no material difference between the parties as to the terms and conditions of the verbal contract of hiring, except with respect to the period of service. The plaintiff testified:

“I agreed with' him to farm two acres of tobacco and four acres of corn and one acre of potatoes, and, while I was not working in that crop, X was to help him in his crop for 60 cents a day for eight months.”

The defendant’s testimony was to the effect that the contract of hiring was for the entire year, the plaintiff to furnish all labor for his own crop, to work for the defendant at the stipulated wage of 60 cents per day'when not engaged in his own crop, and when needed by defendant throughout the year, and to receive as additional wages or compensation one-half of the crops raised by him. The evidence adduced oh behalf of the defendant tended to establish that he had complied with all conditions of his agreement; that the plaintiff had breached the contract of hiring, in that, about the 1st of August, after he had gathered his tobacco and had received his one-half, from which he “cleared” about $150, he had “quit,” refusing to work for defendant when badly needed for gathering his cotton crop, going off the place to work for others, and leaving his corn to be destroyed by the hogs and cows in the field; that the plaintiff1 had not furnished all the labor for making and harvesting his own crop as agreed; that defendant had sent word to the plaintiff to *115 gather the corn, and, upon his failure to do so, defendant had been forced to gather it for his own protection; and that, as a result of the plaintiff’s quitting, defendant had lost a part of his own crop, etc.

The foregoing reference to certain of the evidentiary facts is deemed sufficient to disclose defendant’s theory of the case, and the grounds in fact upon which he denied legal liability to- the plaintiff, on September 18th of the -crop year, for the value of one-half of the corn claimed as compensation for labor under the share-cropper contract. His legal position, based upon the contentions of fact indicated, and embodied in certain requests to charge, was that the relation between plaintiff and defendant under the share-cropper contract was that of master and servant (Huff v. Watkins, 15 S. C., 82; 40 Am. Rep., 680. Id., 18 S. C., 511. Kennedy v. Reames, 15 S. C., 551. Carpenter v. Strickland, 20 S. C., 1. Richey & Miller v. DuPre, 20 S. C., 6) ; that the defendant was the owner and entitled to possession of the share-crop until a_ division was made (Loveless v. Gilliam, 70 S. C., 391; 50 S. E., 9. Newton v. Bennett, 111 S. C., 1; 96 S. E., 620) ; that the contract of hiring was for the entire year, and that a breach thereof by plaintiff barred a recovery upon a quantum meruit (Byrd v. Boyd, 4 McCord, 246; 17 Am. Dec., 740. Shuman v. Heldman, 63 S. C., 489; 41 S. E., 510. Daly v. Jefferson Hotel Co., 98 S. C., 226; 82 S. E., 412) ; and that, because of the plaintiff’s breach of the contract in quitting the defendant’s service, and in failing and refusing to furnish his labor when needed on defendant’s own farm, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The defendant’s legal position was essentially sound, and,- as there was evidence to support his contentions of fact, he was clearly entitled to have his theory of the case submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions by the trial Court.

*116 This brings us to the point upon which the. appeal turns. Appellant contends (exceptions 3, 4, 5, and 6) that, not only did the Circuit Judge fail to charge the law applicable to the defendant’s theory of the facts, but that he expressly excluded that theory in erroneously instructing the jury as follows (the portions of the charge excepted to, with the context, being here set forth consecutively) :

“Now, here is the important part: 'That on or about the 10th of September defendant, without the knowledge, consent, or agreement of the plaintiff, entered upon the said four acres of corn, and before it was matured gathered the said corn crop, and, as plaintiff is informed and believes, hauled the same in his barn, and is now holding the same; that plaintiff is informed and believes that the said one-half of said corn crop amounted to 50 bushels of the value of $125 ; all of which is justly due him.’ ‘If the greater weight of the evidence makes out that thing, then the plaintiff, Hardwick, is entitled to recover the sum of money which you gentlemen will fix, according to how you consider that the evidence established the value of the corn that had been taken from him. Now, the defendant comes in and claims a. number of legal points which I will read to you as he presented them to the Court, and will then call- yo%ir attention 'to the vital issue already indicated. These are the requests to charge of the defendant: [The requests of defendant were here read by the Court to the jury.]
. “Now, those are the legal points which counsel for the defendant has written out and has requested me to charge to you.

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Cooksey v. Beaumont Mfg. Co.
9 S.E.2d 790 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.E. 204, 124 S.C. 111, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardwick-v-page-sc-1923.