Meinhard Bros. v. Youngblood

15 S.E. 950, 37 S.C. 231, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 26, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 950 (Meinhard Bros. v. Youngblood) 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
Meinhard Bros. v. Youngblood, 15 S.E. 950, 37 S.C. 231, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 13 (S.C. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pore.

This is an appeal from the order of Judge Witherspoon, who heard the cause at Abbeville in the Court of Common Pleas, at the June term, 1891, of said court, dismissing the complaint because it failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The respondents having made a motion to set aside the proof of service upon them by publication, and this motion having been refused, the respondents give notice that they will in this court use this error of the Circuit Judge in fortifying his dismissal; on the ground, in other words, that he ought to have dismissed the complaint on this ground, even if he was in error as to the oral demurrer.

1 We will consider respondents’ proposition in relation to the alleged defective service by publication against the defendants. Witz, Biedler & Co., and Hurst, Purnell & Co., both, are non-residents of this State, residing in the city of Baltimore, Maryland. They had by proceedings in accordance with the laws of this State attached all the property of the defendant Youngblood on the 5th January, 1891, in the County of Abbeville, South Carolina, and such property so attached was in the hands of Mann, the sheriff of Abbeville County, under such attachment. Plaintiffs brought their action to vacate such attachments. It became necessary to serve the nonresident defendants by publication. It is claimed by defendants that such effort was fatally defective. The decisions of this court render any consideration of the alleged defects in such service by publication entirely unnecessary. It has been held by this court that where such defendants come in and answer [236]*236the action as to its merits, they thereby cure any defects in the publication or service otherwise. The effect of such a step on the part of such defendants is equivalent to personal service of the summons, or, as it is stated in Toland v. Sprague, 12 Peters, 330, “that exemption from liability to process is a personal privilege which may be waived; and that appearing and pleading will produce that waiver.” In Graveley v. Graveley, 20 S. C., 104, it was held : “For it seems to us that by answering to the merits, she properly submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the court, and the matter stands as if she accepted service, or authorized her attorney to do so for her”—citing State v. Sarratt, 14 Rich., 29. Also, see Oliver v. Fowler, 22 S. C., 540. Not only in those cases, but iu Chafee v. Postal Telegraph Co., 35 S. C., 378, this principle was again affirmed as the law of this State. We must, therefore, in this particular, hold that the Circuit Judge did not err.

2 We will next consider the ground of appeal of the plaintiffs, appellants, viz.: That the Circuit Judge erred in sustaining defendants’ oral demurrer, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. What are the causes of action as fixed by the allegations of the complaint1? The plaintiffs allege that the defendant Youngblood was indebted to them on the 5th January, 1891, in the sum of $2,091.35, as evidenced by his notes therefor. This is a cause of action against one of the defendants, Youngblood. Next, that all the defendants have invaded his rights by taking, and procuring to be taken, under the guise of attachment proceedings, the whole estate, real and personal, of Youngblood, who is utterly insolvent, so that defendants claim a prior lien thereon, which will exhaust the whole estate, thereby leaving creditors to nearly two-thirds in amount of said Youngblood without any portion of his estate to apply to the payment of their claims, and that all such transactions were collusive and are a fraud upon the rights of all other creditors.

It is the opinion of every man who extends credit to another person, that in case of the failure to discharge such debt by the debtor himself, his property, under the law, can be made by sale to discharge the same, if sufficient in value; that in the [237]*237event there should prove more creditors than one, such property when sold shall be applied equally to the adjustment of such creditors. It is equally understood, that if by reason of superior diligence a bona fide advantage is obtained by one of such creditors over the remaining creditors, so that his claim on such debtor’s property is preferred in payment over the others, that advantage is sustained by the law. But if in the obtaining such advantage by one creditor over the balance, there is any collusion, unfair means, or fraud between the creditor and the debtor, the law very wisely upsets such unfairness. Testing the allegations of this complaint by this simple enunciation of the rule, we do not see how the Circuit Judge sustained this demurrer.

3 The Circuit Judge refers to the provisions of section 2014 of the General Statutes as in his mind when he dismisses the complaint, but a careful study of its different allegations causes us to hesitate in accepting such a construction. Why should the plaintiff narrow his line of attack? He alleges a fraudulent collusion between certain parties, whereby his right of property is invaded. At least two remedies exist in law to give him relief, if he can prove his charges. Why should it be said that he takes one remedy to the exclusion of the other? He said so in his argument at bar in the Circuit Court. If the respondents can furnish additional grounds, while in this court, to those of the Circuit Judge, in his own behalf, why may uot the plaintiff, appellant? Such question was not passed upon by the Circuit Judge, says some one. What was passed upon by the Circuit Judge, but the insufficiency of the allegations of the complaint to support a cause of action? And if error in such conclusion, while being heard on appeal, can be shown, it is legitimate for the appellant to do so. And, as before remarked, we think he is so entitled to upset this demurrer.

4 But, again, it is urged that the plaintiffs not being judgment creditors, when a return to his execution by the sheriff of nulla bona exists, that he is not entitled to maintain this action. Be it remembered, that this, confessedly, is a creditors’ bill, for all creditors who shall come in, &c. The eye of [238]*238this court foresaw just such business troubles when the-present Chief Justice penned the judgment in Miller v. Hughes, 33 S. C., 538. There objection was raised, that Miller, although a creditor of Hughes, was not a judgment creditor with an unsatisfied execution endorsed by the sheriff with a return of nulla bona, and this court said: “But we do not agree that, in a case like this, it was essential to allege that the plaintiff had recovered judgment and obtained a return of nulla bona on their execution. It is quite true that such an allegation is necessary in a complaint to set aside a voluntary conveyance upon the ground of legal fraud merely, for the reason, that in such a case there is no fraud, which is the real foundation of the action, until it has been made to appear that the debtor has no other property to which his creditor may resort for payment of his debt, except that embraced in the voluntary conveyance; and this, it is supposed, can best be shown by the return of nulla bona. See the remarks of Chief Justice Simpson, in reference to this subject, in Suber v. Chandler, 18 S. C., 526.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 950, 37 S.C. 231, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meinhard-bros-v-youngblood-sc-1892.