Latham v. Town of York

43 S.E.2d 467, 210 S.C. 565, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 2, 1947
Docket15977
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 S.E.2d 467 (Latham v. Town of York) 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
Latham v. Town of York, 43 S.E.2d 467, 210 S.C. 565, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 54 (S.C. 1947).

Opinion

Baker, Chief Justice:

The order made by the Circuit Judge in this case disposes of the case on its merits. It is our opinion that the merits of the case were not before the Circuit Judge, and that, against the objection of the appellants, he was without power to deal with the case in this light. We find it unnecessary, therefore, to state the facts beyond the scope of the procedural questions involved.

The Town of York owns the water plant operated in the municipality. The Woodlands Realty and Development Company (hereinafter-referred to as the Company, and this designation also includes the parties named as individuals and *568 as owners and stockholders of the Woodlands Realty and Development Company), a corporation, owns certain property outside of the limits of, but contiguous to the Town of York, and is engaged in the development of this property as a residential subdivision.

The appellants (plaintiffs below) allege in their complaint that the Town of York and the Company claim to have entered into an agreement under the terms of which the water line of the municipal water plant which runs t0‘ the Town limits at the point where the Company’s lands adjoin, was to be and was being extended along the property of the Company; and that the claimed agreement provides for the payment by the Company to the Town of a flat monthly sum of $20.00 for water for a period of two years or until the Company’s development has reached such proportions that the income to the Town from the users of the water exceeds $20.00 per month. The appellants further allege that if any such agreement as that above stated has been made, .it is “invalid, illegal and void” upon a number of grounds set forth in the complaint. The grounds of attack are in the main that the alleged agreement was not made by the adoption of an ordinance or in conformity with the proper procedure governing action by the city council; that it is ultra vires; and that it involves an unlawful delegation of municipal governmental powers to a private concern.

The suit is brought by the appellants as citizens, inhabitants, freeholders and taxpayers of the Town of York. The defendants are the Town of York, the mayor and members of the town council, and the company.

With this complaint there were filed several affidavits of residents and property owners of the Town of York, and of officials of the town supporting various allegations of the complaint.

Upon this complaint an order nisi was granted requiring the respondents (defendants) to show cause “why there should not be issued a writ of injunction perpetually restrain *569 ing and enjoining all of the above named respondents from carrying out” the provisions of the alleged contract, and “also perpetually restraining and enjoining” the respondents from extending the waterworks of the Town beyond the corporate limits for the purpose of furnishing a water line to the company’s property. In this order there, also is a provision restraining the respondents, pending the hearing of the matter, from proceeding with the performance of the contract.’And finally the order sets forth “that the matter may be heard on affidavits to be presented at the hearing.”

A return was made by the Town of York, and by its mayor and town council setting forth in detail the provisions of the contract in question and the circumstances under which the same was made, it being alleged that practically all of the expense of extending the water line would be borne by the company and upon the completion of the water line it would become the property of the town; and claiming that the said contract was made under statutory authority and is otherwise legal and proper in respect to all of the matters alleged in the complaint. Allegations of the complaint respecting alleged inadequacy of the water service available to residents within the city limits are among those which are denied by the respondents.

The matter came.up for hearing before the Circuit Judge on the pleadings and affidavits above referred to. According to the agreed statement in the transcript of record, the following then occurred:

“At the opening of the hearing before Hon. J. Woodrow Lewis, at Chester, S. C., Counsel for Appellants moved for a continuance and asked for an Order of Reference, saying that there were certain records of the Town Council of York which were not available and which were material and that in the short time between the application for the rule and the hearing, Appellants had been unable to put into affidavit form many matters material to the issues in the cause. Counsel for Appellants at the same time stated that it would be *570 agreeable to go into the merits of granting an injunction pendente lite extending the ex parte restraining order, but objected to trial of the case upon the question of granting or refusing a permanent injunction.

“After argument the Court ruled that the Appellants were bound by the terms of the rule and that the case should proceed,. His Honor, Judge Lewis, ruling that the case would have to be heard on the merits upon the record as made up and refusing the motion for continuance or for the appointment of Referee.

“The case was then tried upon the verified Complaint and Return, the affidavits in support of each, and full arguments.”

The Circuit Judge thereupon granted an order discharg-. ing the rule, dissolving the temporary restraining order and dismissing the complaint.

The pleading of the appellants is described in the record as a “verified complaint and petition for writ of injunction,” and in the body of the complaint the parties are described respectively as “petitioners” and “respondents.”

The pleading of the respondents is designated as a “return to the rule to show cause issued herein and to the complaint and petition.” And in the order of the Circuit Judge the respondents’ pleading is described as a return made in conformity with the provisions of the order nisi.

No other pleading was served by the respondents, so that as the matter comes before this Court, the case has been disposed of without an answer or a hearing on the merits. It might be that the respondents’ return could be treated as an answer -to the complaint. If it be so treated, it would still be true that the cause has been disposed of on its merits, on the pleadings and affidavits, without any hearing in a constitutional sense.

It appears to us to be clear that Judge Lewis proceeded upon a misapprehension as to the legal meaning and scope of the order nisi granted by Judge Gaston. *571 In that order Judge Gaston did refer to the hearing as involving the granting of a perpetual injunction, but obviously this must be deemed to have been an inadvertence, for such an injunction, involving the disposition of a case on its merits, can be granted only after the customary pleadings have been serv.ed and full opportunity has been granted to the litigants on both sidqs of the cáse to present their evidence.

When Judge Gaston directed in his order nisi

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.E.2d 467, 210 S.C. 565, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latham-v-town-of-york-sc-1947.