Pringle v. Rhame

44 S.C.L. 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 44 S.C.L. 72 (Pringle v. Rhame) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pringle v. Rhame, 44 S.C.L. 72 (S.C. Ct. App. 1856).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

WITHERS, J.

The leading question presented by this case is, whether it is concluded by the rule derivable from Smith vs. Henry, 1 Hill, 16. In that case as in this the facts concurred, to wit: that a debtor sold personalty, (a slave in the present instance, several in the other,) to an antecedent creditor, and the possession was not changed, but in each case [75]*75remained witb tbe debtor. In Smith vs. Henry tbe debtor continued to use tbe property as bis own, there being no fact established that be was to pay any hire; whereas in tbe present case a note was given for hire by tbe debtor. Does this fact, supposing tbe contract for hiring to be bona fide, distinguish tbe two cases, and vindicate tbe doctrine held upon circuit, that possession remaining in tbe vendor upon tbe contract of hiring opened tbe inquiry, as to fraud in tbe sale, and carried it to tbe jury as a question of contested fact ?

There is no doubt we must give an affirmative answer, and maintain, that tbe case of Smith vs. Henry does not apply, where such a contract for hire, bona fide, is made between vendor and vendee.

Eor this we have tbe clear and distinct authority of Judge Harper himself, who pronounced tbe opinion in tbe case of Smith vs. Henry. This appears in tbe case of Jones and Briggs v. Blake and Wife, 2 Hill, Ch. 636-7. In that case tbe stipulation to pay hire was adjudged to take it out of tbe principle of Smith vs. Henry, and it is affirmed, that tbe language used in tbe latter case and tbe quotations from Twyne's case and Sbep. Touchstone, introduced to support it, clearly import a principle which cannot apply where tbe debtor retains tbe possession, after an absolute sale, in pursuance of an honest stipulation for hire.

By consulting tbe case from 2 Hill, Cb. cited above, it will be seen, that tbe principle of Smith vs. Henry was, that though tbe law will not

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.C.L. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pringle-v-rhame-scctapp-1856.