Payne v. Cohen

167 S.E. 665, 168 S.C. 459, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 2, 1933
Docket13572
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 167 S.E. 665 (Payne v. Cohen) 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
Payne v. Cohen, 167 S.E. 665, 168 S.C. 459, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 24 (S.C. 1933).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

The respondent is a young, unmarried man, serving an apprenticeship at the machine shops of the Southern Railway Company near Spartanburg.

The appellant S. G. Cohen was at the time of the occurrences complained of manager of the Rewis Stores in the City of Spartanburg. A person, representing himself to be *461 H. Roy Payne, and signing that name, in 1927 bought of Lewis Stores an overcoat, made a cash payment, and assigned of his wages as an employee of the Southern Railway Company a sum sufficient to protect the credit portion. This debt was paid.

On the 24th day of December, 1930, a person calling himself H. Roy Payne, and signing that name, bought of the Lewis Stores a suit of clothes, made a cash payment, and gave an assignment of so much of his wages as an employee of the Southern Railway Company as would protect the payment of the balance due. These two assignments were identical in name, and other marks of identification, of residence, employment, etc.

The amount covered by the second assignment was not paid when due. Thereupon a letter was written, which, according to the testimony of respondent, was addressed to Mrs. H. Roy Payne; however, it went to the address given on the assignment, and H. Roy Payne got it. He paid no attention to it. Shortly afterward another letter was sent him at the same address, which he got. He testified that he then went to the Lewis Stores; that the manager was out but he saw the bookkeeper, and informed her that he had not made the assignment, nor authorized any one to make it. A short time later he got a letter from Mr. Harvey W. Johnson about the account, and the railway company was advised of the assignment, and held up his wages to the extent of the assignment, viz. $32.50. He then went to the stores and saw Mr. Cohen, the manager. He testifies that he told Mr. Cohen that he had not made the assignment, nor the one in 1927; that he had never bought anything of that store, and did not owe it anything, and demanded that his pay check be released. He refused to go to see Mr. Johnson, appellants’ lawyer with whom the claim had been placed, and refused to write his name.

This action was then brought, claiming $2,900.00 for actual and punitive damages for the withholding of his check *462 and for humiliation and embarrassment for that “he was held out to his superiors and his foreman as a deadbeat and as one who would not pay his bills, and as a dishonest, unreliable and untrustworthy character.”

Defendants answered, setting- up a general denial, except as admitted; setting up the history of the two assignments; that the notice to Southern Railway Company of the assignment was served July 28, 1931; that, upon complaint of plaintiff that his wages were being wrongfully withheld, the defendants gave written notice to the Southern Railway Company on August 29, 1931, to release any wages of the plaintiff that were being withheld under the assignment.

The case was tried before Judge Foster of the County Court of Spartanburg County, and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for $2,900.00 actual damages. The appeal is from the judgment entered on that verdict.

At the conclusion of all the testimony, defendant’s counsel moved for a directed verdict as- to punitive damages, which was refused. After the rendering of the verdict, he moved for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was excessive, unwarranted by the evidence, and that the jury was influenced by passion and prej udice. This motion was refused.

There are seven exceptions; it will not be necessary to treat them in detail, but our opinion will dispose of all of them.

It will be observed that the complaint is not based on any allegations of negligence, but is founded upon an allegation of willfulness and wanton invasion of the rights of the plaintiff. The verdict was for actual damages. Since actual damages may be awarded for willful and wanton conduct, it was essentially necessary that the jury be correctly instructed in the law pertaining thereto.

In the case of Baldwin v. Postal Tel. Cable Company, 78 S. C., 419, 421, 59 S. E., 67, Mr. Justice Woods, delivering the opinion of the Court, said: “* * * The plaintiff omitting to charge negligence, al *463 leges it was done willfully, wantonly, or recklessly, he cannot recover either actual or punitive damages unless he proves willfulness wantonness, or recklessness”—citing Proctor v. Southern Ry. Co., 61 S. C., 170, 186, 39 S. E., 351, and Id., 64 S. C., 491, 42 S. E., 427; Chiles v. Southern Ry. Co., 69 S. C., 327, 48 S. E., 252; Machen v. Western Union Tel. Co., 72 S. C., 256, 261, 51 S. E., 697. Continuing the quotation: “But, under such allegations upon proof of willfulness, wantonness, or recklessness, he may recover both actual and punitive damages. Chiles v. [Southern] Ry. Co., supra; Duke v. Postal Tel. Cable Co., 71 S. C., 104, 50 S. E., 675.”

When, therefore, the trial Judge charged: “Then I charge you that an act is done willfully when it is done intentionally,” he committed error prejudicial to the rights of appellant, and his language in amplification of that charge but added to the harmful effect of it. A man may do an intentional act in ignorance that he is doing a hurt or a wrong to another. Or one may do an intentional act under the honest belief that he is within the law and his rights in the premises. Mr. Chief Justice Mclver in the case of Kobler v. Southern Ry. Co., 62 S. C. at page 270, 40 S. E., 556, 563, quoted the italicized words from the charge of the Circuit Judge, and then said:

‘The intentional doing of any unlawful act would be construed malicious/ — the special error complained of being in the words which we have italicized. This, we think, states the rule in stronger terms than are justified either by principle or authority. One may intentionally do an act which proves to be unlawful without the slightest design to do a wrong to any one. For example, one may intentionally cut trees growing on land which proves upon investigation to be the land of another, although he honestly believed * * * that the trees were on his'own land; and in such a case no one would say that the act was malicious, although the person who cuts the trees did an unlawful act intentionally.”

*464 So, in the present case, even if the notice of the assignment was filed with the railroad company after plaintiff had told defendants that he had not made the assignment, and the defendants honestly believed, and had reasonable ground for that belief, that plaintiff had made the assignment, and they were moving solely to protect their rights, they were not liable for willfulness nor wantonness simply because they intenti'onally notified the railroad of the assignment. Surely they had the right to maintain the status quo until they could investigate the matter. In the light of the very peculiar circumstances of the two assignments by one H.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.E. 665, 168 S.C. 459, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-cohen-sc-1933.