Hunt v. Atlantic Coast Lumber Corp.
This text of 85 S.E. 229 (Hunt v. Atlantic Coast Lumber Corp.) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for damages, alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the wrongful acts of the defendant.
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff at the times hereinafter mentioned was owner of all the pine timber, of certain dimensions, on the tract of land therein described.
That on or about the first day of January, 1911, the defendant entered upon the said tract of land and wilfully, wantonly, and maliciously, cut and removed therefrom, the greater part of plaintiff’s timber, to his damage five hundred dollars as his actual da'mages, and two thousand dollars as punitive damages.
The following statement appears in the record:
“The answer (which for certain reasons counsel have agreed shall not be set out here) admitted the cutting of a certain amount of timber, valued at $111, but denied that the cutting was done wilfully, maliciously or wantonly, and also set up the correspondence which appears later in ths *72 case between the plaintiff and the defendant, in the effort to support its contention that the cutting was a mere inadvertence, and also in the effort to limit its damage.”
Before the trial of the case the defendant’s attorneys offered to allow judgment in favor of the plaintiff for one hundred and eleven dollars and costs, which tender was refused.
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for six hundred dollars and the defendant appealed upon exceptions, which will be reported.
First exception: When the offer was refused, it was deemed to have been withdrawn and could not be given in evidence. Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 424. Therefore, it would have been erroneous for his Honor, the presiding Judge, to have considered it upon the motion for a nonsuit.
*73 Where a fact is first proved by incompetent testimony, and afterwards by proper evidence, the error in admitting the first evidence is harmless. Garick v. R. R., 53 S. C. 448, 31 S. E. 334, 69 Am. St. Rep. 874.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
85 S.E. 229, 101 S.C. 64, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-atlantic-coast-lumber-corp-sc-1915.