Loeb v. Mann

18 S.E. 1, 39 S.C. 465, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 21, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 18 S.E. 1 (Loeb v. Mann) 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
Loeb v. Mann, 18 S.E. 1, 39 S.C. 465, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 152 (S.C. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

This is an action of “claim and delivery” for certain articles of personal property. It seems that F. C. Perry was a retail liquor dealer in Abbeville; that he failed, having in his store the following articles, viz: two barrels of rye whiskey and two cases of fine brandy, worth in the aggregate $223.60; that these articles had been seized by the defendant Mann as sheriff, in behalf of one claiming to be a mortgage creditor of Perry, and that the articles were covered by his mortgage.

The plaintiffs are liquor dealers of Cincinnati, Ohio, and the complaint alleged that the aforesaid articles, although in Perry’s store at Abbeville, were not his property, but had been “con[467]*467signed” to him by the plaintiffs for sale upon their account, and that, the defendant, W. D. Mann, the sheriff, wrongfully and unlawfully took said articles from the possession of Perry, and although demanded by the plaintiffs, the said defendant refused to deliver them, and still unjustly detains them from the plaintiffs, “to their damage two hundred dollars. Wherefore, the plaintiffs demand judgment against the defendant for the recovery of possession of the said goods, or in case a delivery thereof cannot be had, for the value thereof, the sum of $223.40, together with $200, their damages, and for the costs and disbursements of the action.” The defendant answered, that he did not wrongfully and unlawfully take possession of said goods and chattels, but claimed that he seized the same under and by virtue of a certain mortgage to one Bieman by F. C. Perry, who was then in possession of said goods; and that after the seizure and before demand by plaintiffs, the defendant was enjoined from selling or disposing of said goods by the court until further order, which has never been made.

During the progress of the trial, J. S. Loeb, one of the plaiutiffs, was allowed to testify that he was the traveling member of the plaiutiffs’ firm, and that in that capacity made his regular rounds about five times in the year, and he came to Abbe-ville to collect a debt; that he was shown the barrels and cases of' liquor in the custody of the defendant, and upon demand and refusal to deliver the articles, he instituted the action, gave bond, and having the goods delivered to him, he shipped them off upon the Richmond and Danville Railroad. Among other things, he was allowed (over objection) to state what damages he had sustained by reason of the taking of the goods by the sheriff, the expenses he had incurred, such as railroad expenses and all that. (Objection of defendant overruled.) Witness proceeded: “Well, in all I have lost, ten days’ time. I have made one trip, besides the one here. When I came here for the goods, I came from Charleston, and returned just as I am doing now, and my time, at the least calculation, is worth $5 a day, and railroad fare $33 for the second trip; hotel bills $23, and my attorneys’ fee is ten per cent, on the amount recovered, $22, aggregating $129.93. (Objection noted by request.”)

[468]*468IJpon the subject of damages, the Circuit Judge charged as follows: “Now, as to damages, in case you should find for the plaintiffs, the successful party is entitled to damages in all cases where damages are claimed. The amount may be nominal, and it is for you to say what it shall be. In estimating the damages, you are to be governed by the evidence. You must not give remote or speculative damages, and in actions of this bind the case may arise where vindictive damages may be allowed; but I see nothing in this case which would warrant vindictive damages. There was nothing in the action of the sheriff to show that what he did was done maliciously, wantonly, or recklessly; and the mere statement of the complaint that it was ‘wrongfully’ done does not necessarily imply that it was a forcible and malicious taking,” &c.

There was no evidence that the property itself had been damaged or even opened, or that the short delay had reduced the price. The verdict was for the plaintiffs (already in possession of the property), and fifty dollars damages. The defendant appeals upon several grounds; but, from the view which the court takes, it will not be necessary to consider any of them except the second, which is as follows: “Because the Circuit Judge erred in allowing the plaintiff, over specific objections, to swear that he was damaged in the sum of $129.93, included in which amount was an itemized statement as to the plaintiffs’ alleged expenses, as follows: (1) ten days lost (computed), $5 per day; (2) railroad fare, $33; (3) hotel bills, $23; (4) attorneys’ fees, ten per cent, on amount recovered, $22.”

1 The complaint does not make any claim for special damage, and the Circuit Judge charged that the case was not one for vindictive damages, so that it must be considered as a plain and ordinary case for the recovery of personal property, and damages for its detention. “To recover damages for the detention of personal property (the property having been delivered), special damage cannot be recovered unless expressly alleged.” Lipscomb v. Tanner, 31 S. C., 49. What is this special damage which cannot be proved without being specifically alleged? There is certainly a lack of clearness in the authorities on the subject, but it seems to us that [469]*469what are called, “general damages,” as contradistinguished from “special damages,” are admitted in evidence under a general allegation — indeed, are inferred by the law itself — for the reason that they are the immediate, direct and proximate result of the act complained of, as, for instance, an injury to the property itself, or its value, by detention, &c.; while damages which, although the natural are not the necessary consequence of the act, being outside of the “costs and disbursements” allowed by law, and consequential in their- nature, are not admissible in evidence without special notice of the claim in the allegations of the complant, and are, therefore, called “special damages.” It is elementary that damages, in the ordinary sense, must be the immediate result of the act complained of. See Woods Mayne on Damages, p. 48, and authorities in the notes.

Section 326 of the Code provides that the prevailing party may have taxed and inserted in the judgment “the sum of the allowances for costs and disbursements, as prescribed by law, the necessary disbursements, including the fees of officers allowed by law, the fees of witnesses, the reasonable compensation of commissioners in taking depositions, the fees of referees, and the expense of-printing the papers for any hearing when required by a rule of the court. The disbursements shall be stated in detail and verified by affidavit,” &c. See sections 2425 and 2428 of the General Statutes. It would seem that in an ordinary case, where no special damage is asked for, this provision would limit the compensation allowed by law to the prevailing party, who had already the possession of his property.

But it is urged that this action of “claim and delivery” is peculiar in this, that the law expressly gives to the prevailing party damages in addition to costs and disbursements.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E. 1, 39 S.C. 465, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loeb-v-mann-sc-1893.