Lockhart v. Little
This text of 9 S.E. 511 (Lockhart v. Little) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The main questions in this case are: 1st. Should a demurrer to the complaint, interposed on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, have been sustained instead of overruled ? 2d. Should the verdict, which was for the plaintiff, have been set aside; because it did not conform to the statute in such cases ?
The action was technically an action of claim and delivery of personal property, and the complaint alleged wrongful detention [327]*327of the property in general terms, without a special and particular description thereof; for instance, it was described as “one lot of seed cotton, about six thousand pounds, twelve stacks of fodder, one load of corn, about fifteen bushels, of the total value of two hundred and fifty dollars;” and the plaintiff demanded judgment for the recovery of said property, and for the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars damages. A demurrer was orally interposed at the trial, as suggested above, which, being overruled, the case ultimately went to the jury, when a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff as follows : “We find for the plaintiff six thousand pounds of seed cotton, at $2.75 per hundred pounds; three thousand bundles of fodder, at $1.50 per hundred bundles; fifteen bushels of corn, at sixty-five cents per bushel; the total value of the personal property so found to be due to the plaintiff, amounting to the sum of two hundred nineteen and 75-100 dollars.” Upon which a judgment was entered as follow's: “Therefore it is adjudged, that the plaintiff recover of the defendant the possession of the personal property described in said verdict, to wit, six thousand pounds of seed cotton, three thousand bundles of fodder, and fifteen bushels of corn, or two hundred and nineteen and 75-100 dollars, the value thereof, in case a delivery cannot be had, and also that said plaintiff recover of the defendant her costs and disbursements in this action, amounting to forty-seven and 45-100 dollars.”
Actions of claim and delivery are based on title to the precise property sought to be recovered, and to determine this question the property should be described so as to be identified, otherwise there could be no delivery in the event of a verdict for the plaintiff. Such actions are never brought to recover, generally, so much personal property of a certain quantity or quality, and to be satisfied by a verdict for the recovery of property simply of the character mentioned, and of the quality claimed; but the object is to recover special and particular property to which the plaintiff has title, and in case delivery cannot be had, then for its value. And unless the property is described so as to be identified, it would be impossible for the jury to assess its value, or to determine the question of title.
We think that both the complaint and the verdict below were [328]*328defective in failing to meet the requirements above. There is not even a description as to location, which possibly might have afforded the means of identification, if it had been stated; nor is there any other mark alleged by which the property claimed could be distinguished from other chattels of the same kind, and we don’t see how the sheriff, should he attempt to enforce delivery, could seize any particular lot of cotton seed, corn, or fodder, as having been adjudged the property of the plaintiff. There is nothing to guide him, except quantity, which would be wholly unsatisfactory as a means of identification. The case of Eason v. Miller & Kelley, 18 S. C., 385, 386, and Robbins v. Slattery, MSS. Dec., No. 712,1 are in point, and sustained the appeal. See, also, Thompson v. Lee, 19 S. C., 492.
[329]*329It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed.
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9 S.E. 511, 30 S.C. 326, 1889 S.C. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockhart-v-little-sc-1889.