Southern Railway Co. v. Swift & Co.

155 S.E. 429, 158 S.C. 307, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 220
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 17, 1930
Docket13006
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 S.E. 429 (Southern Railway Co. v. Swift & Co.) 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
Southern Railway Co. v. Swift & Co., 155 S.E. 429, 158 S.C. 307, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 220 (S.C. 1930).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Carter.

This action by the. Southern Railway Company, as plaintiff, against the defendants, Swift & Co., C. H. Pfuntner, Improved Ginning & Seed Company, J. J. Haltiwanger, C. *311 E. Morris. H. T. Hughes, and W. G. Peterkin, was commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Calhoun County, August 23, 1928, on which date service'was made on the defendant, Swift & Co.; service being made on the other defendant at some later date, not disclosed by the record. The suit is an action in claim and delivery for the purpose of recovering from the defendant, Swift & Co. “one (1) three-seventy saw cotton gin outfit, which was in possession of the said Swift & Company, who claimed to be the owner and mortgagee thereof, and which was located at Fort Motte, S. C.” The other defendants, according to the allegations of the complaint, were made party' defendants because they claimed some interest in the machinery, which right of interest the plaintiff denied. The defendants, Swift & Co. and J. J. Haltiwanger, filed answers. The other defendants defaulted. The case was tried at the November, 1928, term of said Court, before his Honor, Judge M. E. Bonham, and a jury. At the trial, the defendant, J. J. Haltiwanger, through his attorney, withdrew his answer, and stated in open Court that he claimed no interest in the property in question. At the close of the testimony introduced on behalf of the plaintiff, the defendant Swift & Co. made a motion for a non-suit, which motion, after hearing argument and after due consideration, his Honor, Judge Bonham, granted and issued an order to that effect, stating his reasons for granting the motion. From the order of nonsuit, the plaintiff has appealed to this Court, upon exceptions which will be reported with the case.

The motion for nonsuit was based and granted “upon the ground that the complaint of the Southern Railway set up a cause of action based upon the railway’s subrogation to the claim of Herbert B. Davis, and that the testimony showed that the railway company was not subrogated to the rights of Herbert B. Davis.”

Did his Honor, Judge Bonham, properly construe the complaint in holding that the complaint set up no other cause *312 of action than that through subrogation? So much of the complaint as is pertinent to this question is as follows:

“4. That on or about the 29th day of July, -1927, one Herbert B. Davis delivered to the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railway Company, at Ben Hill, Ga., for transportation to Fort Motte, S. C., and consigned to himself, one (1) three-seventy saw cotton gin outfit, together with the necessary pulleys, shaftings, belts and appurtenances thereto belonging.
“5. That on or about the 2nd day of August, 1927, the said cotton gin outfit arrived at its destination, Fort Motte, S. C., over the line of and'in the custody of the plaintiff.
“6. That on or about the 4th day of August, 1927, the defendant C. H. Pfuntner, claiming to be the agent of the said Herbert B. Davis, and without any authority whatsoever, went to plaintiff’s agent at Fort Motte, S. C., and obtained the said cotton gin outfit from plaintiff by signing a receipt therefor, as follows: ‘Herbert B. Davis, per C. H. Pfuntner.’
“7. That thereafter the said C. IT. Pfuntner moved the said cotton gin outfit from the premises of the plaintiff and placed the same on a lot in the said town of Fort Motte, which he had bought from the defendant W. G. Peterkin, at which place the said cotton gin outfit is now located.
“8. That since the misdelivery of the said cotton gin outfit, as aforesaid, the said Herbert B. Davis brought suit against the plaintiff for the value of the said cotton gin outfit, and did on the 6th day of April, 1928, recover judgment therefor against the plaintiff in the sum of sixteen hundred and seventy-two ($1,672.00) dollars, which judgment plaintiff has paid, and that by reason thereof, plaintiff is now the ozvner of, and subrogated to all of the rights of the said Herbert B. Davis in the said three-seventy saw cotton gin outfit, with pulleys, shaftings, belts and all other appurtenances thereto belonging, and is therefore entitled to the possession thereof. (Italics added.)
*313 “9. That the said cotton gin outfit is wrongfully withheld and detained by the defendant Swift & Company, in whose possession the same now is, notwithstanding that demand has been made upon it by plaintiff for the possession thereof, and that the said Swift and Company refused, and still refuses to deliver the possession of the said cotton gin outfit to the plaintiff.
“10. That the cause of such withholding and detention of the said cotton gin outfit is by reason of a certain chattel mortgage and deed covering the same, which was given to the said Swift and Company by the said C. H. Pfuntner, who had no title thereto, all of which the said defendant Swift and Company, had due notice before the execution and delivery of said mortgage and deed.
“11. That the said property has not been taken for any tax, fine or assessment, pursuant to statute, or seized by virtue of an execution or attachment against the property of the plaintiff.
“12. That the value of the said cotton gin outfit is sixteen hundred and seventy-two ($1,672.00) dollars.
“13. That the defendants, C. H. Pfuntner, Improved Ginning and Seed Company, J. J. Haltiwanger, C. E. Morris, H. T. Hughes, and W. H. Peterkin, claim some interest in the said cotton gin outfit by way of deed, mechanics’ lien or otherwise, all of which plaintiff denies.
“Wherefore, plaintiff demands judgment against the defendant Swift and Company, for the delivery to it, and the possession of the three-seventy saw cotton gin outfit, together with the pulleys, shaftings, belts and other appurtenances thereto belonging, which is now in the possession of the defendant Swift and Company, at Fort Motte, S. C., and in case delivery thereof cannot be made and possession had, then for judgment for the sum of sixteen hundred and seventy-two ($1,672.00) dollars, the value thereof, for the costs of this action, and for such other and further relief as may be just and equitable.”

*314 Under our view of plaintiff’s allegations, it is clear that the plaintiff intended to set up and did set up a cause of action based on the right of sugrogation, and we fail to see wherein any other cause of action is set up or attempted to be set up, and the complaint was so treated at the trial of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.E. 429, 158 S.C. 307, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-swift-co-sc-1930.