Sumter Hardwood Co. v. Fitchette

130 S.E. 881, 133 S.C. 149, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 14, 1925
Docket11881
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 881 (Sumter Hardwood Co. v. Fitchette) 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
Sumter Hardwood Co. v. Fitchette, 130 S.E. 881, 133 S.C. 149, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 68 (S.C. 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This is an appeal from an order signed by his Honor, Circuit Judge Featherstone, upon motion of the plaintiff, *151 referring the case to the Master, and directing him to take the testimony and report his conclusions of law and fact. The defendants opposed the motion, and have appealed from the order.

A motion was made in this Court by the plaintiff, to dismiss the appeal, upon the ground that the order was not appealable. Consideration of that motion was reserved by the Court until the appeal should be heard upon the merits.

It is settled by the decisions of this Court that, if an order deprives a party of the mode of trial which the law allows him, it is appealable. Ferguson v. Harris, 34 S. C., 169; 13 S. E., 332. McLaurin v. Hodges, 43 S. C., 187; 20 S. E., 991. Alston v. Limehouse, 61 S. C., 1; 39 S. E., 192. So that the motion to dismiss the appeal is determinable by the decision of this Court upon the question whether the case is one in which the Circuit Judge, in the exercise of his discretion, was authorized to pass a compulsory' order of reference.

In two quite recent cases (Newell v. Blankenship, 130 S. C., 131; 125 S. E., 420, and Bank v. Foster, 132 S. C., 410; 129 S. E., 629), the Court had occasion to consider this subject, and the conclusion there reached was:

(1) If the cause of action be equitable in its nature, it is within the discretion of the Circuit Judge to order a compulsory reference, only “where the trial of an issue of fact shall require the examination of a long account.” Code, § 593.

(2) In an ordinary action at law, presenting no features of equitable cognizance, the parties are entitled to a trial by jury, even though the examination of a long account may be involved.

To these we add the following proposition, deducible from the second:

(3) In an action at law, which does présent a feature of equitable cogriiance, as where the accounting is long and so complicated that it would be imprac *152 ticable for an ordinary jury to comprehend and decide the issues correctly, the Circuit Judge may, in his discretion, order a compulsory reference; that is to say, that, in a law case, the evidenct fact that the cause involves an accounting of the character described supplies the essential feature of equitable ognizance justifying the order, upon the ground that the party applying for it has not an adequate remedy at law.

In the case at bar, the complaint contains two causes of action. In each of them there is set forth a contract between the parties by which the defendants agreed to cut and log the timber upon a certain body of land upon certain terms and conditions. The contracts were related to separate tracts. In neither cause of action does either party claim anything of the other by reason of a breach of any provision in the contract. In the first cause of action the plaintiff alleges that outside of the contract (as there is nothing in the contract which obligates the plaintiff to do so) the plaintiff “did, at the special instance and request of the said defendants, advance and pay to said defendants considerable sums of money in order to enable the said defendants to carry out the logging operations specified in said contract.” It is alleged that at the termination of the contract the defendants owed the plaintiff for money and supplies advanced by said plaintiff to said defendants at their request as aforesaid “the sum of $3,731.73, and that by reason of the acceptance of certain material and supplies belonging to the defendants, at an agreed valuation, and certain adjustments and allowances” in connection with said indebtedness (for advances in money and supplies), it has credited the defendants with $1,633.04, leaving a balance due by defendants of $2,098.34. The defendants allege as to this that they did not owe the plaintiff $3,731.73 on account of said advances, but that they did owe $3,731.73 less $733 ($2,998.78), and that, instead of the credit of $1,-633.04 for material and supplies, the plaintiff owed them *153 $4,368.31, leaving a balance to their credit of $1,369.53. (There is a discrepancy of $9.26 between the defense and the counterclaim.) The defendants set up a counterclaim on this account of $1,360.27.

The plaintiff’s complaint contains no allegation, and none appears, that the account between the parties comes within the rule above stated under proposition 3. As to the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant, the only point of controversy is a charge of $733.00 for repairs on cars which the defendants deny that they owe; the other part of the account is admitted. We see neither a long nor a complicated account in this item. The claim of the defendants against the plaintiff, $4,368.31, is conceded by the plaintiff to the extent of $1,633.04; the remainder, $2,-735.27, is denied by the plaintiff. The entire item consists of material and supplies taken over by the plaintiff upon the termination of the contract, which the plaintiff claims was at an agreed valuation. We see no reason why a jury could not intelligently decide in the first place whether there was such agreed valuation, and, if not, the value of the several items composing the charge, neither a long account nor a matter of complication.

The second cause of action is based upon precisely the same ^character of dispute and is controlled by the foregoing observations. In it the plaintiff claims that the defendants owed it for advances in money and supplies $2,570.02, which is conceded by the defendants. The defendants contend that the plaintiff owes them $3,927.72, for material and supplies taken over by the plaintiff upon the termination of the contract. Of this, $1,684.43 is conceded by the plaintiff, which claims that that was the agreed valuation of the items. This the defendants deny. We see no reason why a jury could not decide this issue as suggested in reference to a similar dispute in the first cause of action above.

In the case of Smith & Co. v. Bryce, 17 S. C., 538, the plaintiffs were cotton factors in the City of Boston, and *154 brought an action on account of money advanced from time to time, during more than a year, to the defendant. With this money the defendant was to purchase cotton and ship the same to the plaintiffs, and it was claimed that there was a balance due the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs moved for an order of reference, which was granted against the consent of the defendant, who claimed the right of a jury trial. The Judge stated in his order that it appeared that a settlement of a long account was involved. The defendant appealed, and the Supreme Court reversed the Court below and said:

“We are unable to discover in this case anything which imparts to it any feature of equitable cognizance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.E. 881, 133 S.C. 149, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumter-hardwood-co-v-fitchette-sc-1925.