Joiner v. Bevier

152 S.E. 652, 155 S.C. 340, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 18, 1930
Docket12859
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 152 S.E. 652 (Joiner v. Bevier) 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
Joiner v. Bevier, 152 S.E. 652, 155 S.C. 340, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 66 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Brease.

There are two appeals in this cause. The main one is by the defendants from an order of the presiding Judge as to the verdict rendered by the jury. The other is by the plaintiff from the order settling the case for appeal. The case is rather peculiar, for the reason that the plaintiff, who lost his cause before the jury in the lower. Court, is the respondent here, while the defendants, who won the cause before the jury, are the appellants in the main appeal.

The appellants bought from certain parties a bottling plant in the City of Orangeburg. The respondent, Joiner, *342 district manager of the company, was very active in bringing about the sale. The appellants agreed to pay as purchase price the sum of $11,000, $5,500 of which was to be paid in cash. The cash payment was made and notes for the balance of $5,500 were executed and delivered; the notes being secured by a chattel mortgage of the property purchased. The sellers immediately transferred the notes and mortgage to the respondent. The amounts due on the notes, secured by the mortgage, were not paid according to the tenor of the obligations, and the respondent proceeded by an action in claim and delivery to recover the possession of the mortgaged property. He alleged that the principal sum of $5,500, together with interest and attorney’s fees, were due him by the appellants; and that the mortgaged property detained from him was of the value of $6,000; and he asked for damages for the detention of the property the sum of $2,000. The mortgaged property was delivered to the respondent by virtue of the undertaking he gave, the appellants not requiring the return of the property to them.

In their answer, the appellants charged the respondent with fraud in the transactions pertaining to the sale of the bottling plant. They charged that Joiner was interested in the sale of the plant to them, and induced them to make the purchase; that he represented that there were in the plant, connected therewith, and owned by it, 4,800 cases filled with 9-ounce Nehi bottles, and 196 cases and bottles filled with manufactured Nehi therein, making a total of 4,996 cases with bottles therein; that the representations as to the number of bottles were false and fraudulent, since less than 1,100 cases and bottles altogether were connected with the plant, making a shortage as to the bottles and cases of more than 3,700 cases and bottles. They further said that, because of the shortage in the cases and bottles, they were unable to supply their trade promptly and efficiently, and sustained great loss in their business operations, and had to buy bottles and cases which were short, for the purpose of carrying on *343 the business. The appellants also asserted that the respondent refused their demand to make good the shortage of cases and bottles, or credit their notes and mortgage with the value thereof, which would have been about sufficient to discharge the mortgage debt; and that the respondent, when the appellants did not, and could not, under the circumstances, pay the mortgage debt, threatened to put the appellants out of business and cancel their rights to bottle Nehi and Chero Cola, certain proprietary soft drinks, and that the acts and conduct of the respondent ruined and destroyed their business. By way of counterclaim, the appellants demanded the cancellation of the notes and mortgage held by the respondent, the return of the property seized by 'him, and that he pay as damages the amount of $22,500.

The trial of the case took place in the Court of Common Pleas for Orangeburg County before his Honor, Circuit Judge William H. Grimball, and a jury. So far as the record here discloses, things went along smoothly in the trial until the jury brought in their verdict. The trouble was occasioned by the form of the verdict rendered, which often happens in claim and delivery actions, although Mr. Justice Cothran made very clear in Wilkins' v. Willimon, 128 S. C., 509, 122 S. E., 503, the proper forms of verdicts in such cases. The Circuit Judge endeavored to get the jury to follow the instructions given in the Wilkins case, but he found some difficulty, it seems, in getting the jury to co-operate with him.

In order to assist the jury in preparing and returning their verdict, the trial Judge furnished them with two sheets of paper with certain questions asked thereon for the jury to answer, and the form of the verdict to be used. To make matters clear, we have, numbered the questions submitted to the jury, although they were not so numbered on the sheets given them. One of the forms was to be used in case the verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, and the other in case the verdict was for the defendants.

*344 The form submitted, if the verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, was as follows:

(1) “Were there in the bottling plant and territory on February 2, 1927 — approximately 4,800 cases of empty Nehi bottles?”
(2) “If not, then how many cases of empty Nehi bottles were in the plant and territory on February 2, 1927?”
(3) “Was the plaintiff, R. A. Joiner, guilty of actionable fraud?”
(4) “If the last question be answered ‘yes’ then what is the amount of the actual damages of defendants?”
“We find for the plaintiff, R. A. Joiner, the right to the possession of the property described in the complaint, the value of which is assessed at-Dollars.
“Foreman.”

On the sheet directed to be filled out by the jury, if the verdict was in favor of the defendants, the same questions, as stated above, were asked, and this form of verdict was written :•

“We find for the defendants, J. C. BeVier and Rex H. Wunderlich, the recovery of the possession of the property described in the complaint the value of which is assessed at -- — Dollars, together with-dollars damages for the wrongful taking and detention thereof by the plaintiff.”

After the jury had been out for several hours, the Court was informed that they desired certain information, and the record shows the following to have occurred:

“The Foreman: We want to ask some questions. We want to ask if we have to answer all of the questions on either side if we agree with the plaintiff or the defendants.
“The Court: I want you to answer those questions no matter whom you find for.
“The Foreman: Have we got to answer every one ?
“The Court: It depends on how you answer the first one whether or not you answer those. If you answer the first question ‘yes’ there is no use to answer the others. If you *345 answer the first question ‘no’ then go on and answer the next question, and so on.”

When the verdict was returned to the Court, the first question was answered “No”; the second question “1,621 Crates”; the third question “Yes”; the fourth question “$5,-500.00.” The verdict was in this form:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.E. 652, 155 S.C. 340, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joiner-v-bevier-sc-1930.