Hawkins v. Collins

39 S.E. 768, 61 S.C. 537, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 184
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 768 (Hawkins v. Collins) 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
Hawkins v. Collins, 39 S.E. 768, 61 S.C. 537, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 184 (S.C. 1901).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice; Gary.

The record contains the following statement: “This action was commenced by the plaintiffs on the nth day of November, 1898, against the defendants, in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenwood County. The plaintiffs alleging that on the 9th and 10th days of November, 1898, the defendants wantonly, wilfully and unlawfully took and carried away, and converted to their own use, the following described personal property, then in the possession of and belonging to the plaintiffs, to wit: two bales of lint cotton, 900 pounds of seed cotton, sixty-eight bushels of cotton seed, 500 bundles of fodder, fifteen two-horse loads ofspea-vine hay, thirteen bushels of oats, six two-horse wagon loads of corn, and three large black hogs; and asking^ for actual and punitive damages in the sum of $500. The. ; defendants in their answer set forth that they seized the said chattels under a warrant of attachment issued by a magistrate and that the said chattels were covered by an agricultural lien and a certain mortgage given to the defendant, W. A. Collins, by the said plaintiffs. By a later sup-';/ plemental answer the defendants set forth that on the 10th' * day of January, 1899, the defendant W. A. Collins, for ; himself and his codefendant, Frederick Plawkins, delivered \ to the plaintiff three hogs, in full settlement of the claims j and demands of the plaintiffs set forth in their complaint, I and that the said hogs were accepted by the said plaintiffs; ! and in consideration of the same, Frederick Hawkins exe- 1 cuted and delivered to W. A. Collins the release set forth in this case, of which a copy was appended to the answer. J On these pleadings the case was, at the November, 1900, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Greenwood County, called for trial; and after the introduction of testimony, the *540 rulings and charge of the presiding Judge, the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiffs • against the defendant, W. A. Collins, on which judgment was duly entered. The defendant, W. A. Collins, within the proper time made a motion for a new trial on the minutes of the Court, based on the undisputed testimony, that after the commencement of this action- the plaintiff, Frederick Hawkins, executed and delivered to the defendant, W. A. Collins, a release from all liability to himself and his coplaintiff arising out of this cause of action, in consideration of three hogs, which hogs were the same for which this action was brought, in part, to recover damages, and that Frederick Hawkins has never returned, or offered to return, the said hogs; it having been submitted that when the plaintiffs neglected to bring this action to recover the value of the property, having another effectual and alternative remedy at hand in an action for claim and delivery, by their election waived their property rights in the chattels to the defendants, and the legal title to the property became vested in the defendants; and a return of a portion of this property as a consideration for the release was a valuable consideration and a complete bar \to the recovery by these plaintiffs. From the judgment in this case the defendant, W. A. Collins, appeals to this Court.”

The release hereinbefore mentioned was as follows: “In consideration of three hogs given me, or returned to me, this day by W. A. Collins, value of hogs is $15, and receipt of which is hereby acknowledged by me, I hereby agree to discontinue a certain suit or suits brought against W. A. Collins and also John Collins, for $500, on the nth of November, 1898, entitled Frederick Hawkins and Mamie Hawkins, plaintiffs, against W. A. Collins, also John Collins, defendant, and I hereby acknowledge that I have received satisfaction in full for same, and the same is settled in full by said considerations and amounts above mentioned. (Signed) Frederick (his X mark) Hawkins. Witnesses: J. K. Harvley, H. M. Harvley.”

*541 The following are the appellant’s exceptions, to wit:

“I. Because his Honor erred in allowing the witness, Frederick Hawkins, one of the plaintiffs, to testify as to his condition when he executed the release; whereas the witness had already stated that he had executed the release, for which three hogs were given him, and that he had never ■ returned, or offered to return, the three hogs; thus having accepted and retained a consideration for the release, he could not be heard to impeach his act without first returning the consideration for which his act was done.
“II. Because his Honor erred, in charging the jury, ‘if the testimony satisfies you that if Fred. Hawkins did sign such a paper, he was not acting as a free agent, but was doing it under some sort of compulsion; if he was frightened into it, or threatened into it, or induced to do' it under duress, that would mean that it was not such a contract or agreement as would bind Fred. Hawkins or affect this suit;’ whereas his Honor should have charged the jury that if a valuable consideration was given to Frederick Hawkins for the execution of the release, such consideration must have been returned, or offered to be returned, before any fraud, duress or threats would render the release voidable.
“HI. It having been admitted that the three hogs, the consideration for the said release, were the same for which this suit was brought, among other chattels, to recover their value in damages, therefore, from the commencement of this action, the plaintiffs having thereby elected to sue for the value of the property rather than the property itself, waived what property right they might have had in the three hogs; and his Honor should have charged the jury that if these hogs were returned to Haydcins as a consideration for the release, that such consideration was valuable and Hawkins would be bound by it, no matter what fraud, duress or undue influence was used to obtain the release, unless he had returned the consideration or offered to return the same; and when his Honor charged the jury, ‘if you come to the conclusion that the hogs were not the property of Collins, *542 but were the property of Hawkins, or himself and his wife, then they could not stand as a consideration of an agreement binding on Fred. Hawkins,’ he committed error, because in so charging he led the jury to believe that if the purported consideration of the release was the same three hogs for which this action was brought to recover damages, then such consideration was not valuable and the release not binding.
“IV. Because his Honor erred in charging the jury, ‘if you are satisfied from the testimony that he was under unlawful arrest or imprisonment, unlawfully in the custody of the law, as has been argued to you, you are to say what the testimony is as to that; however, if you come to the conclusion that he was not acting freely and voluntarily, but signed the paper, if he signed it, under duress, that it was extorted from him by fear or any undue influence, then the paper would not bind him;’ whereas he should have charged the jury that if the agreement was executed for a valuable consideration, and such consideration had not been returned or offered back, then, even though the said Hawkins was not acting freefy and voluntarily, was under duress, or it was extorted from him by fear or undue influence, the release would still have been binding upon him.
“V.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 768, 61 S.C. 537, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-collins-sc-1901.