Kenneth v. South Carolina Railroad

49 S.C.L. 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 49 S.C.L. 284 (Kenneth v. South Carolina Railroad) 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.

Bluebook
Kenneth v. South Carolina Railroad, 49 S.C.L. 284 (S.C. Ct. App. 1868).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Inglis, A. J.

The plaintiffs, Kenneth & Gibson are merchants of Columbia, engaged, inter alia, in buying cotton there and selling the same, by their agents, in Charleston, or sending it through that port for sale abroad. During a period of about fifteen months, extending from 1st July, 1865, to 1st October, 1866, they forwarded by defendants’ road, in various parcels, from time to time, to different consignees, in all, nineteen hundred and thirty-seven bales of cotton. The defendants’ charges for transportation were, in every instance, paid 'by the consignee in Charleston, after the delivery of the cotton and without objection. The rates of charges varied from two dollars to five dollars per bale, at different dates during the whole period, and the aggregate sum paid was about eight thousand five hundred dollars ($8,500.) The plaintiffs allege that the rates of charges for transportation, which they have thus paid, exceed those which the defendant is, by law, permitted to exact, by a large sum, perhaps some [292]*292four thousand dollars or more in the aggregate, and in this action of assumpsit for money had and received by the defendants for the use of the plaintiffs they seek to recover back this excess.

The road of the defendant, in its integrity through one branch, extends continuously from Columbia to Charleston, and supplies the ordinary, and, by reason of the greatly superior capacity, certainty and speed of its transportation, by far the most desirable mode of conveying produce and merchandise between the two points, though it cannot be said to have been, at the time of these transactions, the only mode within the plaintiffs’ power. This road had been destroyed almost entirely from Columbia to Orange-burg, (an intermediate point distant about fifty miles from Columbia,) and its bridge over the Congaree river had been burned, by the invading forces of the United States, in the early part of 1865, and, during the interval covered by these transactions, the injuries had been repaired, and the road put in running order.

It seems to have been proved or admitted, in the development of the plaintiffs’ case below, that the money sought to be recovered had been paid with a full knowledge by the plaintiffs of all the facts and law affecting their liability to pay the same, not as a condition precedent of the carriage or delivery of their cotton, but after the service had been fully performed, and the cotton was out of the possession and beyond the control of the defendant, and without objection or protest or notice of discontent. At least no evidence to the contrary of this was adduced.

The important question, which has been most fully and ably discussed at the bar is, whether, for such purpose and under such circumstances, the action can be maintained. The Judge, presiding below, considering that the case made by the plaintiffs fell within the operation of the approved maxim of the law, “ volenti non fit injura,” thought [293]*293it could not, and, at the defendant’s instance, ordered a nonsuit. The motion here is to set aside the nonsuit.

The action for money had and received has been as favorite a subject of eulogium on the law, as the prayer for general relief has been on the equity side of the Court. Lord Mansfield in 1760, in Moses vs. Macfarlan, (2 Burr, 1005,) said: “This kind of equitable action, to recover back money, which ought not, in justice to be kept, is very beneficial, and, therefore, much encouraged.” “The gist of this kind of action is, that the defendant, upon the circumstances of the case, is obliged by the ties of natural justice and equity to refund the money.” And again, in 3786, in Towers vs. Barrett, (1 Ter. Rep. 134,) “I am a great friend to this action for money had and received; it is a very beneficial action and founded on principles of eternal justice." “I do not think the action can be too much encouraged.” And as was to be expected, we find, very soon after, Buller, J., who was one of Lord Mansfield’s puisne Judges, saying in Straton vs. Rastall, (2 Ter. Rep. 370,) “ Of late years this Court has very properly extended the action for money had and received; it is founded on principles of justice.” But even so soon as that day, conception of the application of the action, so large as to provoke a caution, seem to have resulted from such bountiful commendations. He adds : “ I do not wish to restrain it in any respect. But it must be remembered, that it was extended on the principle of its being considered to be like a bill in equity. And in order to recover money, therefore, in this form of action, the party must show that he has equity and conscience on his side, and that he could recover it in a Court of equity.” Lord Alvanhey in 1802, in Johnson vs. Johnson, (3 Bos. & Pull. 162,) lifted a little higher note of warning. “In Moses vs. Macfarlan, some principles were laid down which are certainly too large and on which I do not mean to rely; such as that whenever one man has money [294]*294which another ought to have, an action for money had and received may be maintained, or that wherever a man has an equitable claim, he has also a legal action.” The general proposition that "wherever one person has, in bis hands, money equitably belonging to another, and which, therefore, ex aequo et bono, he ought not to retain, that other may recover it in assumpsit for money had and received,” has however, been so often affirmed by the Courts that it has come to have almost the force of a maxim — the wisdom and experience of the expounders and administrators of the law.

But where one man voluntarily pays money to another, it cannot be against conscience and right, that the receiver should retain it. An intelligent assent to its receipt by the payee as his own ought to estop the claim of the payer to have it restored. That cannot be said with propriety to be voluntarily done, where a formal assent thereto is induced by mistake, or procured by fraud or deception, as to facts material to control the operation of the will therein, any more than where such formal assent is extorted by the application of a force which fetters and obstructs its free working. "I think,” says Gibbs, J., in Brisbane vs. Dacres, (5 Taunt. 143,) “that when a man demands money of another as of right, and that other, with a full knowledge of the facts upon which the demand is founded, has paid a sum, he never can recover back the sum he has voluntarily paid.” “ I think that by submitting to the demand he that pays the money, gives it to the person to whom he pays it, and makes it his and closes the transaction. He that receives it has a right to consider it his without dispute • he spends it in the confidence that it is his, and it would be most mischievous and unjust, if he, who has acquiesced in the right by such voluntary payment, should be at liberty, at any time within the statute of limitations, to rip up the matter and recover back the money. He who received it is not in the same condition. He has spent it [295]*295in tbe confidence that it was his, and perhaps has no means of repayment.” “ It is very important,” says Abbott, C. J., in Skyring vs. Greenwood, (4 B. & C. 272; 10 Eng. C. L. Rep. 335,) “to every man that he should not be led to suppose that his income is greater than it is.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.C.L. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-v-south-carolina-railroad-scctapp-1868.