State v. Haynes

55 S.E. 118, 74 S.C. 450, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 S.E. 118 (State v. Haynes) 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
State v. Haynes, 55 S.E. 118, 74 S.C. 450, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 150 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

The appellant was indicted, convicted and sentenced for selling and disposing of personal property under mortgage or lien, as prohibited in section 337 of the Criminal Code.

At the close of the testimony for the State, the defendant’s counsel made a motion to direct a verdict, which was refused, and the first, second and third exceptions assign error to such refusal. Two questions are presented under these exceptions : 1st, whether the instrument introduced in evidence constitutes a chattel mortgage or lien; 2d, whether there was any evidence that defendant sold or disposed of mortgaged property, as prohibited in the statute.

The instrument in- question reads as follows:

*452 “Goods on long credit. Payments- weekly.
“Contract.
“$06.00: Anderson, S. C., 3-20-1905.
“This is to certify that I have this day rented or leased from Walter H. Keese the following articles of merchandise: One open face 18 McKays Montawk 7256757 with 21 Hamilton 266041 P. No. 7447 trade Waltham, amounting in value to1 $26.00-, on the following conditions: That I will pay Walter H. Keese $00' cash on delivery and- $5.00' every 1 & 15 month until the amount of $26.00 is paid in full. One week’s failure to pay forfeits the goods. No money refunded if goods have to- be taken back. Patrons are expected to read this contract.
“I expressly agree that the above mentioned goods remain the exclusive property of Walter H. Keese until paid for in full, and on default of one week’s payment, to be subject to his order, and can be taken back or seized by him without process of law, and the payments made shall be considered as rental for the use of the above goods. Goods sold, traded or given away without consent will be subject to immediate seizure and forfeiture of all previous- payments.
“(Signed) John R. Haynes.”

1 Walter H. Keese, the party to- whom the defendant executed this instrument, testified that he sold to- defendant for $26.00 a 21 jewel Hamilton movement, which he placed in a watch case belonging to- defendant, and took the paper on both the case and movement to secure the debt. While the paper in question contains some expressions- which indicate that the parties contemplated a lease, there are other expressions which indicate that a sale was contemplated. But the testimony of Keese makes it clear that, so- far as he was concerned, the paper was intended as a mortgage to- secure a debt not only upon the property which he sold to- defendant, but upon defendant’s watch case as well. If in considering an appeal from refusal to direct a verdict in a criminal case we may adopt the same rule *453 applied in considering appeals from' refusal of nonsuit in civil cases and consider the testimony offered after such refusal (as in Scates v. Henderson, 44 S. C., 554, 22 S. E., 724; Hicks v. Southern Ry., 63 S. C., 567, 41 S. E., 753; and Pales v. Browning 68 S. C., 19, 46 S. E., 525), it appears that the defendant also understood that the paper was given to secure the price of the watch movement sold to him by Keese. We think the Circuit Court committed no error in construing the instrument to be a mortgage, especially in the light of the circumstances surrounding the transaction. The case falls within the rule stated in Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Smith, 40 S. C., 529, 19 S. E., 132.

With reference to the second question stated above, we think there Ivas some evidence tending to show a disposal of property under mortgage, in violation of the statute. The testimony for the State tended to show that in March, 1905, after the execution of the said mortgage the defendant carried the watch case and movement out of the State and .placed it in a pawn shop' in Atlanta, Ga., where the mortgagee Keese secured it upon the payment of twelve dollars, within a few days after defendant’s departure from the State. The defendant had specially promised the mortgagee that he would not carry the property from Anderson, S. C., but would deliver it to the mortgagee before leaving. A letter was also in evidence from defendant to Keese in which defendant proposed to pay Keese $20.00 to drop “that case against me,” and there was no evidence that there was any case against him in which Keese was concerned except as to the matter of the watch. These circumstances afforded some testimony to go to the jury, under proper instructions, on the question whether the defendant carried said property out of the State with the purpose of defeating the mortgage lien, so as to constitute such a disposal of property as is punishable by the statute.

The fourth- exception was withdrawn by appellant.

The fifth exception alleges error in excluding the testimony by defendant as to the circumstances attending the *454 execution of the paper contract so as to clear up- the ambiguity in the paper. The Court ruled that defendant could not vary or contradict the paper contract by parol testimony, and was of the opinion that the contract was not ambiguous, but as matter of fact permitted' defendant to testify most fully as to' all the circumstances of the transaction. There is, therefore, no basis for the exception.

2 The sixth and seventh exceptions, relating- to the Court’s charge to> the jury, are as follows: “(6) Error of his Honor, the Circuit Judge, in modifying defendant’s first request to charge; said request was as follows: ‘Before the jury can convict in this case, the State must show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant sold or disposed of the property described in the county of Anderson, State of South Carolina, or at least that he removed it from-the county of Anderson with existing- purpose of defeating the lien. State v. Rice, 43 S. C., 200, 30 S. E., 936.’ The modification is on the margin: ‘Or if without any such purpose, the effect of his taking the mortgag-ed property beyond the jurisdiction should prove a defeat of the lien, he might still be liable.’ It is respectfully submitted that this modification states the law too broadly, and that it would not be a violation of law to move property beyond the jurisdiction without any intention to defeat the lien thereon, and without actually disposing thereof.

“(7) Error of his Honor, the Circuit Judge, in not charging- defendant’s second request without modification.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 118, 74 S.C. 450, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haynes-sc-1906.