Rouss v. King

54 S.E. 615, 74 S.C. 251, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 S.E. 615 (Rouss v. King) 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
Rouss v. King, 54 S.E. 615, 74 S.C. 251, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 125 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The former appeal in this case was from an order of nonsuit which this Court held was erroneously granted — 69 S. C., 163/ Upon the second trial the plaintiff recovered a verdict, and the defendant R. B. King, who* is the surety, appeals.

The written contracts between Charles B. Rouss, of whose will the plaintiff is the executor, and J. B. King as principal and the defendant R. B. King as surety, and a summary of the course of the account between C. B. Rouss and J. B. King are fully set out in* the opinion then rendered, and they need not be here repeated.

The Court in the former appeal had under consideration only the question whether the plaintiff had made out a case for the consideration of the jury, but in setting aside the nonsuit these points were necessarily decided: (1) the con *253 tract provided for a continuous credit; (2) the creditor did not discharge the surety by extending to the principal debtor credit without the knowledge of the surety beyond the amount to which the pliability of the surety was limited; (3) the creditor in the absence of instructions from the debtor had a right to> apply credits to the general account and hold the surety for the balance to the extent of the amount covered by his undertaking; (4) the removal of the business of the principal debtor from Bishopville to Columbia did not operate as a discharge of the surety, merely because the principal debtor was spoken of in the contract as J. B. King of Bishopville; (5) the surety was not discharged by the refusal of the creditor to' accept additional security, the additional security in this case being insurance policies; nor by the fact that one of the policies suN sequently taken out by the creditor himself with the assent of the debtor in Victoria Montreal Insurance Company became valueless, the only evidence before the Court going to show it had become SO' without fault on the part of '.he creditor.

With this statement of the scope of the decision in the former appeal, we proceed to the consideration of defendant’s exceptions.

The first five exceptions charge error in the admission of evidence of the witness Keeney, the credit manager and general bookkeeper of C. B. Rouss, as to the custom of sending out statements of accounts, the receipt by the defendants of these statements, their acknowledgments of the correctness of the statements by indorsements thereon; as to the goods being ordered by defendants, the prices charged being reasonable and agreed to. by the defendants, and the entry of all credits; as to notice to defendants that it would be advisable to cancel the policy of insurance in the Victoria Montreal Insurance Company and obtain another policy in its stead; the refusal of J. B. King to take out another policy, giving as a reason that he could not afford to pay the premium, and the failure of C. B. Rouss to take *254 out another policy because he relied on the notes and contracts here in suit.

1 2 The objection to- this evidence was- that it was not the best evidence, and that it related to^ matters of which witness had no- personal knowledge. The testimony of this witness was the first introduced, and it is all given as if in his own knowledge, with nothing to inform the Court that it was based on hearsay. It is said in Sloan v. Hunter, 56 S. C., 385, 390, 34 S. E., 658, that like testimony there under consideration “was not liable to exclusion as hearsay, for while there is great probability that much of her testimony was founded on what she had heard, still it was given in answer toi a question as to- her knowledge, and if it was really hearsay it was incumbent on the objector to- make that fact appear to the Court.” It is true, the wit-» ness does refer to< written acknowledgments of the correctness of the statements by the defendants, and attached to- his evidence only the acknowledgment of J. B. King, the principal debtor, but he had already testified to the correctness of the account, and there was no' real dispute as to the amount of the account. The evidence that J. B. King refused to- take out a policy of insurance and cancel the doubtful policy of the Victoria Montreal Insurance Company was relevant, because it tended to rebut the charge of lack of diligence on the part of Rouss- in failing to keep up the insurance.

3 The evidence of this witness to' the effect that there was no agreement that the notes and contracts- were to be null and void in case the business- w-as moved from' Bishopville may be regarded as a denial of the existence of any separate agreement of that import, and so viewed it was clearly competent; the statement of the witness as to' his construction of the contracts sued on being incompetent, was struck out by the order of the Circuit Judge.

This evidence was taken de bene esse, and the respondent makes the point the objection not having been made when the evidence was taken, comes too1 late at the trial. It is *255 not necessary to decide this question, because as we have seen the objection if made in time was properly overruled.

4 The defendant next submits there was error in excluding evidence as to insurance policies taken out by J. B. King, the principal debtor, and the refusal of Rouss to accept them.. Rouss had no claim on the stock of goods and the contract gave him. no- control of the insurance, and, therefore, under the contract he had no responsibility with relation to it. When, therefore, the insurance policies issued to King in Columbia were sent to him, neither dne principal debtor nor the surety had any right to require him to take them. Nor was- the debtor under any obligation to cancel them1 on his advice. The insurance was absolutely under the control of J. B. King. All evidence, therefore, as to the refusal of Rouss to accept the policies sent to him was irrelevant, whether his reason for such refusal was sound or not. The charge of the Circuit Judge was in accordance with this view and there was no error in refusing requests to the contrary.

5 When, however, Rouss subsequently took uppn himself the responsibility of advising as- to the insurance and procured policies on the stock of goods with the acquiescence of the debtor who> was the owner, he became a trustee as to the insurance charged with the exercise of reasonable diligence in seeing to- the solvency of the insurer as well as other matters which might affect the value of the insurance. But it is manifest this responsibility would end as soon as he gave the owner of the property the information which he himself had,' and offered to follow his directions. On this point the Circuit Judge charged: “If J. B. King took out insurance on this property and turned it over to Rouss and Rouss did not care to receive it, he was not obliged to receive it. If Rouss took out a policy of insurance on the property of King to secure him, and paid rhe insurance premiums and charged them to King, and J. B. King acquiesced in that, R. B. King would owe him on the account for whatever amount of the premiums was paid. If *256

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.E. 615, 74 S.C. 251, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rouss-v-king-sc-1906.