Taylor v. Highland Park Corporation

42 S.E.2d 335, 210 S.C. 254, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1947
Docket15936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 S.E.2d 335 (Taylor v. Highland Park Corporation) 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
Taylor v. Highland Park Corporation, 42 S.E.2d 335, 210 S.C. 254, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 25 (S.C. 1947).

Opinion

Stukes, AJ.:

This appeal is from refusal by the Circuit Court of a motion for an order requiring that the complaint be made more definite and certain by the separate statement of the several causes of action allegedly set forth. Sec. 478, Code of 1942.

Eor full understanding of the issues presented the material portions of the complaint and the prayer are set forth:

“Pour: That on or about December 23, 1943, the Plaintiff and the Defendant entered into a contract whereby the Plaintiff agreed to purchase and the Defendant agreed to sell all that lot, piece or parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate, lying and being in Berkeley County, South Carolina, known as No. 87-A Highland Park Avenue in that certain subdivision known as Highland Park and more particularly described on a plat made by W. L. Gaillard which is recorded in the RMC Office for Berkeley County in Plat Book C at pages 88 and 89; and that the Defendant further agreed to furnish the said property with a hot water heater, an electric stove and a frigidaire; and that in consideration of the above the Plaintiff paid to the Defendant the sum of $1,350.00 and assumed a mortgage on the said premises in the amount of $4,300.00.

“Five: That the Plaintiff is informed and believes that the maximum price at which the Defendant was permitted by law to sell the said property was $4,800.00.

“Six: That the Defendant has failed to tender to the Plaintiff a deed to the said property giving the Plaintiff a good and marketable fee-simple title thereto, and that the Defendant has failed to provide the Plaintiff with the electric stove and frigidaire as required by the said contract.

*257 “Seven: That the Plaintiff has duly performed all of the conditions of the contract on his part to be performed.

“Eight: That by reason of the aforesaid, the Plaintiff has not received the title of ownership of the said property as contracted for by him, and the Plaintiff has been further damaged in the amount of $1,163.00.

“Wherefore the Plaintiff asks judgment that the Defendant shall execute and deliver to the Plaintiff a deed in fee-simple absolute to the said property together with the sum of $1,163.00, with interest at the rate of 6% per an-num from December 23, 1942, together with the costs of this action.”

The lower court held that the quoted complaint states but a single cause of action, for specific performance. Defendant appeals upon the following exceptions:

“I. The Court erred in overruling the Motion to Make Complaint More Definite and Certain, in that, it appears from the Complaint that Plaintiff undertakes to state (a) a cause of action for Specific Performance of a contract for the sale of real property; (b) a cause of action for General Damages based on the failure to provide certain household appliances and (c) a cause of action for reformation of the contract by reducing the amount to be paid to an amount equal to the maximum price allowed by law.

“II. The Court erred in not holding that the Plaintiff in alleging ‘that the maximum price at which Defendant was permitted by law to sell the said property was $4,800.00’ taken in connection with other allegations of the Complaint, in effect is an allegation that Plaintiff! is entitled to a reformation of the Contract, so as to fix the correct price to be paid by him under the Contract and is a separate and different cause of action contained in the Complaint.

“III. The Court erred in not holding that in addition to the other causes of action stated in the Complaint, the Complaint contains a separate cause of action for general damages *258 for breach of the alleged contract set out in the Complaint which is independent of and departs from the other causes of action set out therein.”

These exceptions raise the questions:

Is separate statement of a cause of action for reformation of the contract necessitated by the contents of the complaint?

Does the complaint state a cause of action for general damages, also necessary to be separately stated?

The questions concede, as do the exceptions, that the complaint states a cause of action for specific performance. For the purpose of our consideration and decision it may be further conceded that reformation is sought by respondent. That does not require separate statement of a cause independent of the cause for performance. They are instead remedial rights in equity which arise from one transaction, the contract.

The “reformation” here referred to relates to the allegedly illegal sales price, which is akin to the ground of fraud or of mutual mistake. In such cases under our liberal code pleading there need be no separately established or separately stated cause of action for reformation.

Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, 5th Ed., Vol. Ill, Sec. 862, p. 364 et seq., after stating the contrary former English rule, changed by the Judicature Act, says: “The American courts have pursued a more simple and enlightened course of adjudication. The doctrine is well settled in the United States that where the mistake or fraud in a written contract is such as admits the equitable remedy of reformation, parol evidence may be resorted to by the plaintiff in suits brought for specific performance. The plaintiff in such a suit may allege, and by parol evidence prove, the mistake or fraud, and the modification in the written agreement made necessary thereby, and may obtain a decree for the specific enforcement of the agreement thus varied and corrected * * * In those states which have adopted the reformed *259 procedure this doctrine is clearly established and its operation enlarged. In one civil action the plaintiff may not only unite and obtain both the remedy of reformation and the equitable remedy of specific performance, but also the remedy of reformation and the legal remedy of a pecuniary judgment for debt or damages for the breach of the contract as corrected, or the legal remedy of a recovery of specific property. Also, the defendant, by means of a counterclaim, may obtain against the plaintiff the same union of affirmative equitable or equitable and legal reliefs.”

It is also said in Vol. 1 of this recent edition, Sec. 87, p. 115: “Thus where the pleadings and evidence are such as would warrant the court in reforming an instrument sued on, it is held that the court may give effect to the true contract, and enforce the same as if reformed, without making a formal decree of reformation.” And in the same volume (1), Sec. 183, p. 261: “Whenever a plaintiff is clothed with primary rights, both legal and equitable, growing out of the same transaction or condition of facts which thus constitute a cause of action, and is entitled thereon to an equitable remedy, and also to a further legal remedy based upon the supposition that the equitable relief is granted, and he sets forth all these facts in his petition, and demands a judgment awarding both species of relief, the action will be sustained; the court will, in its judgment, formally grant both the equitable and the legal relief. In these cases there is, properly considered, no joinder of different causes of action; there is only the union of different remedial rights flowing from one cause of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 S.E.2d 335, 210 S.C. 254, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-highland-park-corporation-sc-1947.