True v. Cudd

91 S.E. 856, 106 S.C. 478, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 8, 1917
Docket9633
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 S.E. 856 (True v. Cudd) 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
True v. Cudd, 91 S.E. 856, 106 S.C. 478, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 58 (S.C. 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

The plaintiff shed the defendant for $789.94 money loaned to him. She alleged in brief that the defendant had a store, and had her husband for manager, and she loaned the defendant through her husband for the business of the store the said sum of money in differing amounts and at different times.

The defendant alleged a totally different story. He admits that he acquired the store at the bankrupt sale of S. E. True & Co. in August, 1910, and that he continued to conduct the business as S. E. True & Co., and sometimes as True’s department store; but the defendant alleges that prior to the bankrupt sale he made an agreement with S. E. True, whereby True would soon after the bankrupt sale organize a company to take over the business and relieve the defendant; that defendant was to “finance” the repurchase for $1,500.00; that the money so paid by the plaintiff “was a part of the purchase price at the bankrupt sale,” and “was accepted by the defendant as part of the consideration of the contract between the defendant and S. E. True;” that True continued to.be about the store until 1911 without any employment by defendant; that the plaintiff well knew of the aforesaid plan of her husband.

There is no allegation that True’s plan to take over the store ever came to fruit; nor is there any allegation or proof that Cudd ever ceased to own the' store. He testified he owned it from August, 1910, on. Betwixt these two tales *482 the jury was constituted to judge, and it found for the plaintiff.

The defendant has appealed from the judgment upon five grounds; these have each been argued, and each will be separately examined. The payments hereinbefore referred to were made in the months of August, September and October, 1910, as is hereinafter more particularly set out. At the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence, 'and it was received, an advertisement made by the defendant July, 1911, in which it was recited “that S. E. True had resigned his position as manager of True’s department store.” The defendant objected to the testimony because “all these matters are dated 1910.” The inference and argument is that, because True was manager in 1911, there is no reason to conclude he was manager in 1910.

1 The defendant does not pretend that S. E. True was ever owner or part owner of the store after the defendant bought the bankrupt stock, and that though S. E. True used $998.44 of his wife’s money in it; but the answer admits he was “about the store” in 1910, and the admission is that Cudd owned the store after August, 1910. In what capacity was S. E. True there? Cudd testified: “I didn’t consider True manager; he was there looking after the business.” The advertisement in July, 1911, recited that he had resigned as manager. If True was “about the store” from August, 1910, and his resignation as manager was announced in July, 1911, it was for the jury to infer whether he was there in 1910 as a hanger-on, or as manager for the defendant.

2 It would have been perfectly competent to prove, other than by the advertisement, that True was in fact manager in January, 1911, and to rest upon that circumstance and the further circumstance that he was in the store in 1910 to prove that he occupied the same relationship to the store when he was there in 1910, as he confessedly occupied in 1911. The advertisement did no more, and *483 it was relevant and competent. Of the four cases cited by the appellant, two of them- involved the competency of an agent’s declaration; one of them involved the power of railroad officer to bind his principal by an admission after the event; in one of them the issue was whether a bulletin order was printed in time-tables of years previous to 1891, and it was held that a time-table of 1891 was not competent to show the fact. None of those cases are determinative of this case.

3 The second exception is to the charge, and partly upon the ground it was on the facts. Cudd had been sued in a magistrate’s Court in 1911 by one Stanford, and apparently for the price of goods sold to this same store. In that action True is said to have testified that the store belonged to his wife, the plaintiff here, and that she alone had put any money in it; that Cudd had an interest in-the store, but had put no' money in it, and only guaranteed the bills. The Court allowed that testimony to discredit True’s testimony in the instant action, but charged the jury that as Mrs. True was not a party to that case, she was not bound by anything done in it. The defendant excepts to the limitation put on the testimony. The Court was clearly right; that which S. E. True said outside of the instant case is a declaration. Such a declaration was not competent testimony in the instant action to -prove that Mrs. True was owner of the business; and if it was not offered for that purpose it had no relevancy, except to contradict S. E. True, and it was allowed for that.

A married woman’s rights would have no sort of security if she was bound by her husband’s declarations, unless she set him to speak for her. The .declarations, if he made them, put S. E. True in a discreditable attitude, but they did not touch the wife’s integrity. It is suggested by the appellant, however, that S. E. True was representing Mrs. True in the Stanford suit. There is no evidence of that. It is true Mrs. True did testify that “Mr. True has represented me *484 all the while in these matters;” but the witness was plainly referring to the money she loaned to the store through S. E. True. She was not questioned about S. E. True’s testimony in the Stanford case.

4 She distinctly testified that she loaned the money to the store, and she did not know who owned the store, but that she did not. The charge had no sort of approach to the facts. In State v. Mitchell, 56 S. C. 524, 35 S. E. 210, the Court did tell a jury it might throw out some of the competent testimony where there were contradictions in the testimony, and that of course was held to be error. But the Court here told the jury not to consider incompetent testimony. The cases have no likeness to one another. The Court declined to charge the jury:

“That if the plaintiff in this action acted through her husband as her agent in the transactions involved in. this controversy, then she is bound by all the facts of which her husband had notice or knowledge.”

The third exception challenges the refusal. Standing alone, unrelated to the case as made by the testimony, the proposition is sound. Applied to the testimony, it is irrelevant and therefore unsound. What facts at issue in this controversy did S. E. True have knowledge of?

5, 6 The issue tried was: Did Mrs. True lend the money to the store, or invest it in the store as owner? If S. E. True knew she was owner and.not creditor, that would not bind her unless she authorized him to act for her. She did not put the money in his hands to use as he thought best; there is no such testimony. There is no testimony to create the relationship of principal and agent betwixt the plaintiff and S. E. True, except the testimony that she gave the money to S. E. True to pay the store’s debts.

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Related

Johnson v. Arbabi
553 S.E.2d 453 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.E. 856, 106 S.C. 478, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/true-v-cudd-sc-1917.