Laurens Trust Co. v. Copeland

151 S.E. 617, 154 S.C. 390, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 7, 1930
Docket12828
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 151 S.E. 617 (Laurens Trust Co. v. Copeland) 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
Laurens Trust Co. v. Copeland, 151 S.E. 617, 154 S.C. 390, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 34 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Justice Oscar Hodges.

This is an appeal from an order of special presiding Judge, C. Granville Wyche, refusing a motion to set aside and vacate a defáult judgment.

It appears from the transcript of record in this case that the Laurens Trust Company obtained a judgment by default against E. W. Copeland and his wife, Lizzie H. Copeland, in the sum of $1,987.08, on December 31, 1924, and this judgment was duly entered and enrolled in the Clerk of Court's office at Laurens on January 1, 1925, and duly assigned to one J. D. Watts, November 20, 1926. The summons and complaint was lodged, on December 1, 1924, with the Sheriff of Laurens County for service. The affidavit of service is dated December 31, 1924, and it shows on its face that copies of the summons and complaint were personally served on each of the defendants, E. W. Copeland and Lizzie H. Copeland, on December 4, 1924, by one L. F. Nabers, deputy sheriff, and purports to have been signed by him before Alice R. Poole, a notary public in the .office of R. E. Babb, Esq. The summons and complaint, the affidavit of proof of service, affidavit of no answer, order for the judgment, and all other papers constituting the judgment roll, are regular upon their face. A motion was duly noticed and made in the original case before Judge C. C. Featherstone on May 31, 1928, upon all the records in *396 the case and on certain affidavits submitted at the hearing; the purpose being to set aside and vacate said judgment on the grounds that the summons and complaint were never served on the defendants, E. W. Copeland and Lizzie H. Copeland, and that the Court had not acquired jurisdiction of them. Judge Featherstone, after hearing arguments thereon, referred the case to the lamented Hon. Frank P. McGowan, an able and distinguished member of the Laurens bar, to take the testimony in the case and to report the same to* the Court. Upon the testimony so reported, and on all records in the case, Judge Wyche, after hearing the motion, refused to grant the same by order dated December 22, 1928, and the case is now in this Court on appeal from that order.

There are various grounds of appeal set out in the record which will be incorporated in the report of this case, together with the order of the Circuit Judge.

Under the view which we take we do not deem it necessary to consider these grounds seriatim. The only question before this Court is whether there was any testimony to sustain the findings of fact of the Circuit Judge. The law is firmly established in this State, by an unbroken line of decisions, that this Court cannot review the findings of fact made by the Circuit Court in a law case; that whenever it is a question of the sufficiency of testimony, this Court is powerless in a law case, to interfere, but this Court can review the facts for the sole purpose of determining the question as to* whether there is any testimony whatever in the case to sustain or support the judgment* of the Circuit Court, as this presents a question of law. With this principle clearly in mind, we have carefully examined the entire record in the case for the sole purpose of determining the question as to* whether there is any evidence whatever supporting or tending to support the findings of fact of the Circuit Court that the defendants were served with copies of the summons and complaint in this *397 case, or had any notice of the pendency of the action. We must confess that, after a painstaking examination, we have been unable to find any testimony in the record that the defendant Lizzie H. Copeland was ever served, or that she had any notice that the action was pending against her. It is true that the affidavit of service, purporting to have been signed by the deputy sheriff, L. F. Nabors, shows upon its face that she was personally served on December 4, 1924. The return of this officer is only prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated, but this affidavit of service has been impeached by extrinsic evidence, and the proof of its falsity has been clearly and convincingly established. The deputy sheriff testified that he never served the summons and complaint upon Mrs. Copeland, and that he had never seen her in his life until the day of the hearing before the Referee, and Mrs. Copeland declared positively that she had never been served; that she never heard of the papers being left at her home; and that she had never met Mr. Nabors until the day of the taking of the testimony. The testimony was uncontroverted that it was not the signature of Nabors to the affidavit of service, and there is no testimony in the record that she was ever served by any other person, or that she was ever given any notice of the pendency of the action. On the contrary, no other inference can be drawn from the testimony, other than that she never had any notice that an action was pending against her, or that a judgment had been obtained against her, until she was notified of this fact in March, 1928, more than three years after rendition of the judgment, and she immediately consulted Mr. Richey with a view to have the judgment set aside. There is nothing in this case to bring it within the rule laid down in the cases of Dill-Ball Co. v. Bailey, 103 S. C., 233, 87 S. E., 1010, and Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Still et al., 140 S. C., 18, 138 S. E., 401, where this Court held that, while the service in those cases was not altogether regular, yet the parties were fully informed of the pendency of those ac *398 tions. In those cases copies of the summons and complaint were left in mail boxes at the respective residences of the parties, and the testimony showed that they got the papers in their possession, and the Court very properly held that, they were informed of the action pending against them, and that this was sufficient to show service and a substantial compliance with the law. In the present case, there is no evidence whatever that copies of the summons and complaint were served in any manner upon Mrs. Copeland, or that she ever had any notice of the pendency of the action against her, unless the return of the deputy sheriff in the record is to be taken as evidence thereof. If you disregard the return of the deputy sheriff, which' we hold should be done, for the reason that the presumption of its correctness has been entirely overcome and rebutted by the uncontradicted extrinsic evidence of its falsity, then there is not a particle of testimony remaining in the record to sustain the findings of the Circuit Judge. There is no evidence of laches on the part of Mrs. Copeland, as she applied promptly to the Court for relief, after she learned that the judgment had been entered against her. She has not had her day in Court, and the judgment as to her should have been set aside.

Now, as to E. W. Copeland, the case presents a different question. It appears from the testimony of Mr. Babb, counsel for the plaintiff, who testified in substance that he told Mr. Copeland that he would have to sue on the note which his firm held for collection against him and Mrs. Copeland, and that Mr. Copeland requested him to say nothing to his wife about it, as it might cause much uneasiness to her; that he told Mr. Copeland that he would have to enter suit against him and Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.E. 617, 154 S.C. 390, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurens-trust-co-v-copeland-sc-1930.