Indigo Associates v. Ryan Investment Co.
This text of 431 S.E.2d 271 (Indigo Associates v. Ryan Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Indigo Associates and Newington Associates (collectively “Indigo”) brought this action against Ryan Investment Company, which does business as Tremond Inn, for ejectment because of Ryan’s failure to make timely property tax and rental payments. The magistrate court ordered ejectment. Ryan appealed and the circuit court reversed. Indigo now appeals the circuit court’s findings that Indigo failed to comply with the notice provisions of the lease, that Ryan cured any default under the lease, and that forfeiture in this case would be inequitable. We reverse.
The predecessors of Indigo and Ryan entered into a fifty-year ground lease for certain property in Cayce, South Carolina in 1955. Thirty-four years later, Ryan took an assignment of the lease and brought the motel building situated on the property. The lease contained a provision that required the lessee to pay all property taxes on the leased premises. Ryan consistently made late rental and tax payments.
On July 26,1991, Indigio sent a certified letter to Tony Mc-Creight, Ryan’s president, in which Indigo informed Mc-Creight that Indigo considered the lease in default because of Ryan’s failure to pay the 1990 property taxes that had become due on January 15, 1991, and in which Indigo demanded payment of the taxes under the terms of Paragraph Illf of the [521]*521lease.1 Indigo addressed the letter to McCreight’s offices in Columbia, South Carolina and not to The Citizens and Southern National Bank of South Carolina, as specified by the lease.2
An unidentified person in McCreight’s office building received and signed for the certified letter on July 28, 1991; however, McCreight did not receive the letter until August 3 or 4,1991. On August 30,1991, Indigio paid the 1990 property taxes that Ryan owed on the leased property and brought the instant action in the magistrate court. Ryan paid the past-due rent and reimbursed Indigo for the property taxes on September 3,1991.
In the magistrate court, Ryan took the position that Indigo, by accepting Ryan’s late tax and rent payments, waived the forfeiture provision contained in the parties’ lease and was therefore estopped from claiming forfeiture.3 The magistrate, [522]*522however, found “there [was] no estoppel or waiver.”
After the magistrate ordered Ryan ejected from the leased premises, Ryan appealed to the circuit court. Ryan based its appeal on the following three exceptions:
1. The [magistrate] erred in concluding that [Indigo] had not waived the late payment of rent by the later acceptance of such rent, said error being that [Indigo] waived such default.
2. The [magistrate] erred in concluding that [Indigo] had not waived the late payment of real estate taxes by the later acceptance of such payment, said error being that [Indigo] waived such default.
3. The [magistrate] erred in issuing the Writ of Ejectment, said error being that [Ryan] has expended considerable sums on improvements on the premises, and [523]*523an eviction in these circumstances is unduly harsh and [Unequitable.
The circuit court reversed the magistrate, finding as a matter of law:
that [Indigo] has failed to comply with the terms of the lease as to notice; that under the terms of the lease [Ryan] was not in default, having cured the default within the time permitted under the lease[;] and that it would be inequitable to invoke forfeiture of the lease under all of the facts and circumstances.
As the circuit court noted in its order, the circuit court, pursuant to S.C. CODE ANN. § 18-7-170 (1985), in appeals from the magistrate court, “may affirm or reverse the judgment of the [magistrate], in whole or in part, as to any or all the parties or for errors in law or fact.” Nonetheless, the circuit court is restricted regarding which issues it may entertain in determining whether a judgment should be affirmed or reversed, either in whole or in part. The circuit court, acting as an appellate court in a case heard by the magistrate, cannot consider questions that have not been presented to the magistrate. See Sanders v. Hayes, 128 S.C. 181, 122 S.E. 572 (1924) (where the defendant failed to object at the trial that the magistrate was related to the plaintiff although his attention was called to it, that objection cannot be raised on appeal); Hill v. Garrett, 83 S.C. 572, 65 S.E. 821 (1909) (wherein the court held the objections, on appeal from a magistrate court, were not available unless raised below). Also, the parties to an appeal from the magistrate court are restricted to the theory on which the case was tried in the magistrate court. 51 C.J.S. Justices of the Peace § 141, at 299 (1967); see White v. Livinston, 231 S.C. 301, 306, 98 S.E. (2d) 534, 537 (1957) (“It is well settled that one cannot present and try his case on one theory and thereafter advocate another theory on appeal.”). Ryan clearly did not present to the magistrate for determination the issue of whether Ryan cured its default within the time prescribed by the lease agreement or the issue of whether it would be inequitable under the circumstances to invoke forfeiture of the lease. Certainly, neither of these two issues were ruled upon by the magistrate. As we [524]*524read the record, Ryan proceeded on the theory of waiver and nothing else.
Regarding the issue of notice, we recognize the magistrate, at least arguably, ruled on this issue;4 however, the circuit court should not have considered it because none of Ryan’s three exceptions, even when we, as we must do, construe each exception liberally, preserved the question of notice as a ground of appeal. See Burns v. Gower, 34 S.C. 160, 13 S.E. 331 (1891) (because Code S.C. § 358 (1882) requires appeals from a trial justice to the circuit court be heard on all the papers in the case, including testimony taken in writing on the trial “and the grounds of exception made,” the circuit court can only consider those questions raised by the exceptions); S.C. CODE ANN. § 18-7-130 (1985) (providing that a circuit court hear an appeal from the magistrate court or other inferior court “upon all the papers in the case, including the testimony on the trial... and the grounds of exception made. .. .”); cf. Connolly v. People’s Life Ins. Co. of S.C., 299 S.C. 348, 352, 384 S.E. (2d) 738, 740 (1989) (an issue not raised “by [a] proper exception on appeal presentís] no question for appellate determination”).
Unlike the circuit court, we do not accept Ryan’s assertion that its third exception embraced the notice issue and we agree with Indigo that the issue of notice was an entirely new ground. The plain language of the third exception sets forth only the ground that because Ryan had expended considerable sums on improvements, its eviction from the leased premises would be “unduly harsh and [Unequitable.”
Reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
431 S.E.2d 271, 314 S.C. 519, 1993 S.C. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indigo-associates-v-ryan-investment-co-scctapp-1993.