Murphy v. Atlanta & Charlotte A. L. Ry. Co.

87 S.E. 310, 102 S.C. 509, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 23, 1915
Docket9242
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 310 (Murphy v. Atlanta & Charlotte A. L. Ry. Co.) 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
Murphy v. Atlanta & Charlotte A. L. Ry. Co., 87 S.E. 310, 102 S.C. 509, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 240 (S.C. 1915).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

A former action upon this same transaction has been hither before. There have been three trials on circuit.

At the first trial plaintiff was nonsuited, and the judgment was affirmed. 89 S. C. 15, 71 S. E. 296.

Thereafter .the plaintiff commenced another action, but upon the same transaction.

The pleadings are practically the same, except that the second answer plead res adjudicata.

The second action came first to trial at the Summer term, 1914, and resulted in a mistrial.

The second trial of the second action now considered, was had at the following Fall term, without a jury.

The defendant there moved under a stipulation of counsel, and upon the testimony taken at the first trial of the second action for a directed verdict, or for a nonsuit.

By that stipulation it was further provided, that if the motion should be denied, then the Court might render judgment for the plaintiff for the liquidated sum of $2,250.

The Court sustained the defendant’s contention as for a directed verdict, and the plaintiff has appealed.

*514 The single issue presented for our decision is whether the verdict ought to have been directed for the defendant; and the gravest issue before us is, whether the order granted at the former trial of this action is a bar to the present action.

It is true there are six exceptions and many specifications of error under each; and there are six grounds set out by the defendant on which it is contended the Court might have predicated its judgment, but' did not.

These we shall not consider in their named numerical order; but we shall aim to decide all the vital issues which have been made.

The respondent’s counsel has stated and argued five issues, and we cannot do better than follow in some fashion his logical order.

First. The former judgment is a bar. ,

Second. No testimony tending to show negligence by the defendant.

Third. Any negligence was that of Corn, a fellow servant of plaintiff.

Fourth. Plaintiff assumed, as part of the risk of his employment, the negligence of Corn.

Fifth. Plaintiff’s own negligence contributed to the result.

The Circuit Court concluded that the judgment rendered at the former trial was a bar to this action; and it also concluded that the testimony in the case warrants the conclusion to which the Circuit Court came at the trial of the first action, to wit: (1) That there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the, defendant; (2) that the injury was the result of the plaintiff’s own negligence; (3) that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

A history of the case is given in the former appeal, and it needs not to be restated here (89 S. C. 17, 71 S. E. 296).

1. The writer of this opinion thinks the plea in bar is good and ought to be sustained; but the majority are of a *515 contrary opinion. The writer, though, will state the reasons for his opinion.

It is confessedly true that when an issue between two litigants has been once decided, it may not be again raised by one of them. That is true in this case.

If this case had gone to the jury on the first trial after the plaintiff’s witnesses had testified, and if the jury had found for the defendant, that surely would have been the end of it. There cannot be two opinions about that.

How is the case altered that the Court found the truth of the answer, to wit: that there was only one inference to be drawn from the plaintiff’s testimony, and that was the plaintiff himself did the act, or what amounts to' the same thing, combined and concurred in its accomplishment.

The Court so found, and this Court affirmed that judgment, and found the same thing; and the finding was made upon testimony. It makes no difference that it was testimony offered by the plaintiff; it was testimony which established a fact, and the judgment found the fact.

The plaintiff could not in the case first stated have, thereafter, renewed the controversy by swearing other witnesses to make a different and stronger proof of his allegations.

Does a like conclusion follow in the second stated case where the defendant says at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, “You have not proved your case, and you have proved my case" and the Court holds both; that is to say, when the plaintiff’s testimony stops short of a mark set in the complaint, a nonsuit so holding means nothing; and the controversy about the transaction may be renewed. But when the plaintiff’s testimony not only stops short of the mark set by the complaint, but proves as matter of law the mark set by the answer, and the Court so holds, why does not that end the controversy ?

The judgment of the Court in such a case as that last, stated may be called a nonsuit, but that is a misnomer; it is a determination of the rights of the parties to the action, *516 according to the plea and the testimony, and it ought to be final.

• .The view here stated was announced in the Morrow case (84 S. C. 224, 66 S. E. 186, 19 A. & E. Ann. Cas. 1009); but the concurrence of the Court there was only in the result; so the record does not show if the Judges agreed to the announcement.

But the same principle was plainly stated in the Hodge case (90 S. C. 229, 71 S. E. 1009). There a plaintiff sued upon a tort and alleged the transaction; and upon demurrer it was held that the allegations of the complaint showed affirmatively that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

The plaintiff sued again on the same transaction, and this Court held that the order in the first case was a bar to the second action.

How is the matter altered in the instant case that the witnesses, and not the complaint, showed in the first action that the plaintiff had no good cause of action ?

Under the doctrine of the Hodge case, if Murphy had set up in the first complaint the facts which were proven by the witnesses; and had the Court held that those allegations created no cause of action, that would have concluded the second action. There is no difference in reason that the vital and defeating fact of the plaintiff’s negligence is shown by the mouth of the witness and not by the pleadings.

An examination of the cases cited by Mr. Justice Woods. in his separate opinion in the Morrow case do not, we venture to think, sustain the view announced by him. The facts of those case's did not call for or warrant it.

The only case in our own reports, to which we’have been cited, which seems to hold against our view is that of Lyon (84 S. C. 364, 66 S. E. 282).

But in that case this Court itself ordered the case to be .retried; it could not, therefore, deny’the lawfulness of that which it had ordered done. ’ ’ -' "

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gary v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance
152 S.E.2d 689 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1967)
Parker v. Victoria Real Estate Co.
89 S.E. 1068 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 310, 102 S.C. 509, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-atlanta-charlotte-a-l-ry-co-sc-1915.