Springs, Heath & Co. v. South Bound R. R.

24 S.E. 166, 46 S.C. 104, 1896 S.C. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 9, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 166 (Springs, Heath & Co. v. South Bound R. R.) 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
Springs, Heath & Co. v. South Bound R. R., 24 S.E. 166, 46 S.C. 104, 1896 S.C. LEXIS 50 (S.C. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

The plaintiffs are cotton buyers in this State, and, as such, shipped over the defendant railroad to the city of Savannah, Georgia, 171 bales of cotton, in two separate lots — one lot containing 110 bales and the other 61 bales, arriving at destination about 28th February, 1893.

The defendant stood the cotton bales up on the end of the bales, exposed to the weather, from 28th February, 1893, until the 23d of April, 1893, at which time they were shipped by the steamer D. H. Miller to the city of Baltimore, where they arrived on 25th April, 1893. The cotton was sold to Albert G. Ober, of that city. When weighed by Albert R. Rhett, a public weigher of that city, the heads of bales were found to be wet with water; the 110 bales of cotton, which weighed 57,045 pounds, had picked therefrom 1,823 pounds of cotton which was spoiled by water, thus leaving 55,222 pounds. The 61 bales of cotton, which weighed 30,439 pounds, had picked from them, as spoiled by water, 1,382 pounds, thus leaving 29,057 pounds. The first lot sold at 8-J cents per pound. The second lot was sold at 8J cents per pound. The gross loss was $319.29, which was reduced to $275.64 by a sale of the damaged cotton for $43.65-100. Hence the plaintiffs sued the defendant railroad company to recover from it the sum of $275.64, as injury to the 171 bales of cotton, which they alleged resulted to their property from their negligence and carelessness in exposing the cotton to the weather for nearly [108]*108two months. The answer admitted the shipment over its road by the plaintiffs, but alleged that they observed due care of the cotton after it reached the city of Savannah. At the trial, which took place at the spring term, 1895, of the Court of Common Pleas for Richland County, in the State of South Carolina, before his honor, Judge Earle, and a jury, a verdict was rendered for the plaintiffs for $259.61-100. After entry of judgment, the defendant appealed, and the sixteen grounds of appeal will be reported. We will not dispose of these grounds seriatim, but will consider them in three groups: First. All of them that allege error in the admission of testimony. Second. The refusal of the Circuit Judge to grant a nonsuit. Third. The alleged errors-in the charge of the Circuit Judge.

1 The appellant alleges that the Circuit Judge was in error in overruling his objection to the fourth interrogatory of plaintiffs to their witness, Albert G. Ober, which was taken by commission in the city of Baltimore, Maryland. The interrogatory referred to was in these words: “4. Please examine the attached slip, and please state if it was made out at the time by you, and if it correctly represents the claim for damages on the cotton you purchased from Heath, Springs & Co.?” This is the “slip” referred to:

'■'■Claim Damages on Wet Cotton.
Albert G. Ober, May 14, 1893.
Cotton spots and futures, 415 Water street, Baltimore. Messrs. Heathy Springs & Co. Dr.
S. Y. E- 110 bales cotton, original
weights.............................57,045 lbs.
Reweight after picking............55,222 lbs.
Allowance for damages............ 1,823 lbs., at 8fc., $157.24
G. E. D. 61 bales, original weight 30,439 lbs.
Reweight after picking............29,057 lbs.
1,382 lbs., at 8}c., 117.47
[109]*109Extra labor and weighing for picking 171 b. c. above....................................................... 44.58
Cr. $319.29
By sale of pickings........................................ 43.65
$275.64

Received of Merchant’s and Miner’s Transportation Company, April 25, 1893, from Savannah, with damages on end of bales, which necessitated picking to put in order. Albert G. Ober.”

Mr. Ryles, as attorney for defendants, in presenting his objection to the court, said: “The point we make is, whether a memorandum, which may be used for the purpose of refreshing the memory, can itself become evidence in the cause?” The court: “I cannot understand the force of the objection without knowing how the witness answered.” Mr. Ryles: “He answers: ‘The slip or statement was made out May 10, 1893, and represents correctly damages on cottou purchased from Heath, Springs & Co., and paid by them.’ ” The court: “He must speak from his memory; it must be the witness speaking and not the paper.” Mr. Ryles: “That is the point we make.” Mr. Abney, as attorney for plaintiffs: “He says that is a correct representation, that it is his knowledge of it put down in that paper.” The court: “I think it competent.” We have quoted the language of the colloquy to show that the objector himself changed the point he made from an objection to a slip as itself evidence to the use of it by the witness. Clearly, from the standpoint as to the use to be made of it, the Circuit Judge was in entire accord with our decisions and text-writers on this point. See the carefully prepared opinion of this court, announced.by the present chief justice in the case of the State v. Collins, 15 S. C., 376, 377, citing, inter alia, 1 Starkie on Ev., 128; 2 Russell on Crimes, 622; 1 Greenleaf on Ev., 436. After counsel has pointedly and advisedly submitted his objection to the paper, namely, to [110]*110refresh the memory of witness, and thereafter that he shall be required to speak of his own knowledge, he cannot, on appeal, shift his position to an objection to the paper itself. The first and second grounds of appeal must be dismissed.

2 In his third exception the appellant objects to the introduction of the papers marked No. 1 and No. 2, attached to the deposition of the witness Albert, R. Rhett. These papers, No. 1 and No. 2, contain a statement signed by Albert R. Rhett, as public weigher, of the exact weight of each of the 171 bales of cotton after the spoiled cotton had been picked off of the ends. In the' answer to the interrogations propounded to this witness, he states that; as public weigher, he weighed each one of these 171 bales of cotton; that he signed the papers himself, in his official capacity as public weigher, and that of his own knowledge he knows that they correctly set forth the weight of such bales of cotton. We cannot see how this testimony can be objected to under these circumstances. The object of all inquiry is truth. Such being the case, the results of the labors of a public weigher to ascertain the weights of 171 bales of cotton, so that each bale of the cotton so weighed may be identified, must of necessity appear from the contemporaneous records kept by such officer with the fact of his weighing such cotton. This ground of appeal is dismissed.

3 The fourth and fifth exceptions relate to the testimony of the witness, LeRoy Springs, when he referred to the statement of the witness, Albert G. Ober, in order to refresh his memory, as to the price at which he sold these 171 bales of cotton, in the city of Baltimore. It seems to us that this matter is disposed of by what we have said in considering the first ground of appeal. It is clearly in keeping with the decision of this court in

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 166, 46 S.C. 104, 1896 S.C. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springs-heath-co-v-south-bound-r-r-sc-1896.