Scott v. Russ

46 S.E.2d 152, 211 S.C. 526, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 30, 1948
Docket16035
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 S.E.2d 152 (Scott v. Russ) 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
Scott v. Russ, 46 S.E.2d 152, 211 S.C. 526, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 7 (S.C. 1948).

Opinion

Baker, Chief Justice:

The appellant, plaintiff below, obtained from the respondent, a pawnbroker, several small loans on the security of four rings. The aggregate of the loans was in the neighborhood of $55.00. The rings were delivered to the respondent by way of pledge, and the respondent issued to the appellant the usual evidences of the transactions in the form of pawnbroker’s tickets.

This suit was brought for $3,000.00 actual and punitive damages for the alleged wrongful and fraudulent conversion of the rings. The pertinent portions of the answer of the respondent to the complaint are to the effect that a person who the respondent understood to be the husband of the appellant and who he alleges was held out by the appellant *530 to be her husband and authorized agent, tendered payment of the debt for which the rings were pledged, and presented the pawn tickets; requesting delivery of the rings, stating that he was handling the transaction for his wife; that the respondent delivered the rings to this person, receiving payment and the pawn tickets, and that he was thereby discharged from further responsibility and liability in the premises.

The case was tried before the County Court and a jury. The County Judge directed a verdict against the appellant on the subject of punitive damages. He refused respondent’s motion for a direction of verdict and sent the case to the jury on the question of the “true market value of the rings at the time of the alleged' conversion by the defendant.” As the County Judge stated in his order on the motion for a new trial: “This charge eliminated any recovery for sentimental value, which had been somewhat stressed by the plaintiff in her testimony as to the stones having been in her family for generations.”

The record is extremely meagre on the subject of the value of the rings. As to two of the rings the appellant stated that she had been offered a total of $950.00 for the same. As to the other two rings she stated that she would sell the same for $300.00 each. Such testimony, though admitted without objection, has little or no probative value. The respondent, testifying as an expert, placed a value of $225.00 on the four rings.

The jury brought in a verdict for the appellant for $1,500-.00, whereupon the respondent moved for a new trial on various grounds.

One of the grounds of the motion was that during the course of the trial the trial Judge had refused to strike out testimony of the appellant in which she stated that she had been offered $650.00 for one of the rings and $300.00 for another of them.

*531 Another of the grounds of the motion was to the effect that the verdict was so excessive “as to support only the inference that it was capricious and influenced by passion, prejudice or other considerations not found in the evidence.”

And a third ground of the motion was that “there was no evidence in the record of any probative value to support the purported finding by the jury * * *.”

And the final ground of the motion was that “the verdict was excessive and against the weight of the evidence.”

The trial Judge granted the motion for a new trial, and the matter comes before this Court on exceptions to this order.

In view of the fact that an order granting a new trial ordinarily is not appealable, unless the same was induced by an error of law entering into the conclusions of the trial Judge, the first question for consideration by this Court is whether the order granted in this case comes within the general rule above stated or within the exception to such rule.

While there is not before the Court any motion on the part of the respondent to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order granting the new trial is not an appealable order, the respondent has put into the record “additional grounds to sustain” which embrace in substance the above quoted grounds of the motion for a new trial. These grounds if applicable to the order of the County Judge granting a new trial, bring the present case within the category of nonappealable orders, and call for the affirmance of the order appealed from.

The order granting the motion for a new trial is here quoted in full. The italicized portions appear to us to be determinative of the question whether the County Judge relied wholly upon legal considerations among which we may look for an error of law inducing the conclusion of the lower Court, or whether the motion was granted in whole or in part upon one of the several grounds above quoted relating *532 only to the alleged excessiveness of the verdict or the insufficiency of the testimony to support the verdict.

“Order on Motion eor New Triad

“This case was tried before me and a jury on March 18th and 19th, 1947, and resulted in a verdict of One Thousand Five Hundred ($1,500.00) Dollars actual damages for the plaintiff. Thereafter, a motion for a new trial having been noted at the time of the trial, full oral argument was had before me on the motion and briefs were filed by both sides. I have considered the matter most carefully, have examined the authorities cited to me by counsel as well as others disclosed in my own research, and have decided that a new trial should be granted.

“Among the several grounds for a new trial filed by defendant is the contention that the Court erred in admitting, refusing to strike, and in allowing the jury to consider upon the issue of the value of the rings, the plaintiff’s testimony as to offers made to her for the rings; and the contention that there was no evidence in the record of any probative value to support the finding by the jury as to the market value of the rings at the time of the alleged conversion.

“I took from the jury the question of punitive damages and instructed them that the measure of plaintiff’s recovery, if any, was the true market value of the rings at the time of the alleged conversion by the defendant. This charge eliminated any recovery for sentimental value, which had been somewhat stressed by the plaintiff in her testimony as to the stones having been in her family for generations. Plaintiff offered no direct proof of the market value of the rings at the time of the alleged conversion, but testified only that she had been offered $650.00 for one ring and $300.00 for another. She did not testify as to when these offers were made, the terms of the offers, or what relationship to her or the rings the offerors might have had. She did not even state who made the two offers except that on cross-examination *533 she named a person in Charlotte, N. C., as making one of them. Only two of the four rings alleged to have been converted were mentioned in this testimony as to offers and plaintiff’s only testimony concerning the other two consisted of general statements as to the price she would or would not take for them.

“Because of the vagueness of the plaintiff’s testimony in this regard it is obvious that it has little weight, even if testimony as to previous offers is ever admissible and of probative value to prove the market value of property. However, as I read the decisions of our Supreme Court, particularly Baynham v. State Highway Department, 181 S.

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South Carolina State Highway Department v. Clarkson
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Norton v. Ewaskio
129 S.E.2d 517 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E.2d 152, 211 S.C. 526, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-russ-sc-1948.