Sinclair v. Moore

10 S.C. Eq. 431
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1834
StatusPublished

This text of 10 S.C. Eq. 431 (Sinclair v. Moore) 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
Sinclair v. Moore, 10 S.C. Eq. 431 (S.C. Ct. App. 1834).

Opinion

Johnston, Chancellor.

The verdict rendered to me is not open to my examination, being grounded on an issue ordered by another Court. That- Court, if it had authority to order the issue, (having ordered it for the satisfaction of its own conscience, and not for that of this Court,) is alone competent to decide whether the verdict is sufficient to remove the scruples which occasioned the order.

If it was competent for me to examine the verdict, I am free to say that it is as satisfactory as any verdict could be, rendered by a jury having before them only part of the materials which, from the nature of the case, bore as evidence upon the point at issue.

The Court of Appeals, in conceding that the existence or want of consideration for the bond and mortgage of the 3d of May, 1819, might influence the opinion of the jury upon the question, whether the accountable receipt of the same date, called a defeasance, was signed by Price, admits in substance, that the consideration of that bond and that mortgage is matter of evidence on the question last mentioned. Thus, if the direct evidence as to the subscription to the receipt, was equally balanced, and under these circumstances it was proved that the bond and mortgage were upon full consideration, it would be difficult to believe the receipt was genuine; since that would imply that Price had signed a paper giving away upwards of six thousand dollars of his own money. Rut if, under the same circumstances, it was established that the bond and mortgage stood upon no consideration, the mind would conclude it more probable that Price, losing nothing by it, might have signed the receipt. The evidence, therefore, touching the bond and mortgage, was circumstantial testimony as to the genuineness of the ^receipt for them. If,-therefore, there ever was any propriety in sending the latter point to a jury, the evidence respecting the consideration of the bond and mortgage ought then to have been received ; whereby the parties would have saved the expense and delay of a second trial.

[295]*295But I do not believe a jury could liave over inquired profitably into tlie consideration of the bond and mortgage. How could they have ascertained the consideration of them, without examining the accounts from beginning to end ? But this, a Court of law, from its structure, could not well do : and hence a Court of law is never required or permitted to examine matters of account, except when they spring up collaterally to a matter of which that Court has original jurisdiction ; and then, only from the necessity of the case.

Now, the accounts here were never left to the jury, but were all disposed of and sent back to the Commissioner in the same decision which ordered the issue on the accountable receipt: nor did the commissioner make up the accounts under the appeal decree, until after the jury rendered their verdict.

But, inasmuch as the accounts, as made up, upon principles which have been settled both here and in the Court of Appeals, from the best examination I have been able to give them, show a probability that the bond and mortgage were executed upon consideration, I should, if the verdict were returnable to this Court, agree with it. I should say that the bond and mortgage were valid ; and that the accountable receipt for them was a forgery ; indeed, as to the latter, I think there is greatly preponderating evidence of the forgery, independently of the consideration upon which the former stands — so preponderating that I should have decided without subjecting the parties to the expense and delay of an issue at all; in which decision, to be sure, T should not have neglected the light which the accounts and the bond and mortgage would have afforded me.

Being convinced that so fa.r from being bound, I am not at liberty to take cognizance of the verdict rendered upon the issue ordered by the Court of Appeals, while on the *other hand, I am bound to decide on the accounts as made up by the Commissioner, that part of the case having been recommitted to this Court, with directions pointing out the errors to be avoided ; I cannot express my embarrassment ; for it is necessary to a full decision on the accounts that the matters of the. bond, mortgage, and accountable receipt, be taken into consideration ; yet they constitute equities reserved in the Court of Appeals. I felt very much the same difficulty as in Fraser and Vaux, (Charleston, 1833,) where the equities were not remitted by the Court of Appeals, but held in their own hands for decision, while, to satisfy themselves, they ordered certain inquiries by the Commissioner. In that case, I could not decide on his report when it came in.

In this condition, what am I to do ? The order for the issue is not one of this Court, so that if I were satisfied the jury were wrong, I could not supersede it, either for the purpose of deciding for myself on evidence, or for the purpose of ordering another trial, either on the same terms or others. I do not know what the doubts of the Court of Appeals were founded on, so as to say whether the verdict would or ought to resolve them.

On the whole, after much reflection, being determined not to embarrass the case or delay the parties, if any thing I can do can avoid it, I have come to the conclusion, inasmuch as I think, on the evidence and accounts independently of the verdict, that the bond and mortgage arc founded on a consideration, and that the receipt is a forgery; that my [296]*296best course is to sustain the former and reject the latter, in deciding upon the Commissioner’s Report. This is but an affirmation of the former Circuit decree. If the Court of Appeals should, on considering the verdict, come to the same conclusion, the case will have been forwarded: if not, they can correct the report.

Will the difficulty in which I have found myself authorize me to state, with deference, very briefly and imperfectly, why I think the Court of Appeals cannot order an issue in an Equity case ? (Wilks’ case, Columbia Appeals, 1831.) If it be not presumptuous, I would venture to do so.

An issue, such as this, is intended to ascertain a fact.

*It belongs to an appellate jurisdiction, supervising a law decision, to correct, by the Appeal decision, errors of law; but, as to errors of fact, the only correction it can make, is to remit the case to the original tribunal for another trial.

The appellate power, as respects an Equity case, extends to the correction by the Appeal decision, of errors of fact as well as those of law. 11 John. Rep. 406; Rolle Abr. 805; Bac. Abr. tit. Error, M. § 2.

In remitting a law case upon matter of fact, the appellate Court cannot remit one or two points only; it must remit the whole case, and put the .Court below in possession of it, so far as the facts are concerned, in as full and ample a manner as it had at the first trial. Why ? Because the people, by the Legislature, have committed to the Court below, as constituted by them, the decision of the facts; and have only allowed the decision to be supervised, by way.of appeal. Under the guise of supervision, the Court of Appeals cannot send the facts to a tribunal more satisfactory to themselves. It belongs to the Legislature, under the Constitution, and not to the Court of Appeals, to parcel out the judicial power. Const. of S. C., Art. 11, Sec. 1.

With regard to Equity cases, there is' no difference, as respects the power of the appellate jurisdiction to correct errors of law.

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Related

Wilkes v. Rogers
6 Johns. 566 (New York Supreme Court, 1810)

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.C. Eq. 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinclair-v-moore-scctapp-1834.