White v. Metcalf

177 S.E. 371, 174 S.C. 350, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 3, 1934
Docket13956
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 S.E. 371 (White v. Metcalf) 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
White v. Metcalf, 177 S.E. 371, 174 S.C. 350, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 204 (S.C. 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. C. T. Graydon, Acting Associate Justice.

*352 Off the beautiful coast of South Carolina, in the County of Georgetown, lies Sandy Island, the subject-matter of the litigation here to be considered. Sandy Island is one of those innumerable places along our coast which caught the fancy of those interested in restful places for diversion. The island is filled with game and is lapped by the waters of the sea, restful and peaceful, a spot created by God and appreciated by some men. It formerly belonged to one D. V. Richardson and had upon it certain very valuable timber, and Richardson, desiring to reap the material benefits from said timber, sold it to the Huntley-Richardson Lumber Company under a contract of sale, the terms and conditions of which will more fully appear by reference to the suit of Metcalf v. Huntley-Richardson Lumber Co., 170 S. C., 226, 170 S. E., 162. During the existence of the contract and before the same had been completed, Jesse Metcalf saw Sandy Island, desired it, and purchased it from Richardson, subject, however, to the timber contract. Metcalf no doubt realized the value of the trees to his newly acquired estate and he sought to preserve the trees and the woodlands in spite of the existence of the contract between Richardson and the lumber company.

The lumber company had been operating for a number of years and under the contract was supposed to cut at least five million feet of timber a year and to make certain payments to Richardson from the logging and the cutting of said timber. The contract contained a provision which required the lumber company to log continuously and progressively, as near as practicable, conditions of weather, flood coditions and proper operation, strikes, or conditions beyond said company’s control considered, at the rate specified in the contract, and in 1931 the lumber company found that on account of conditions alleged to be beyond its control, to wit, the depression and the flooding of the lumber market, it was unable to continue its logging operations, but at that time it appears that the contract with *353 Richardson was paid far in advance. The lumber company, therefore, stopped its operation and did not attempt to resume the same until February, 1933, at which time the lawsuit here under consideration arose.

In 1933 the lumber company attempted to move back in on Sandy Island and continue its operation in that area, and then Metcalf brought an injunction proceeding in an attempt to stop the lumber company from cutting and removing the timber. A temporary injunction was issued by Judge Ramage on an ex parte showing with the right reserved in the order to move, on four days’ notice, for its dissolution, and the defendant lumber company moved be-for Judge Stoll for the dissolution of said injunction order and this motion was granted by Judge Stoll. The plaintiff Metcalf was not satisfied, so he applied to Chief Justice Blease for a supersedeas, and as a condition precedent to the granting of the supersedeas, Chief Justice Blease required the giving of two bonds, one to the Huntley-Richardson Lumber Company for the sum of $7,000.00, and one to the Clerk of Court for Georgetown County for the sum of $3,000.00, the first-named bond to protect the Huntley-Richardson Lumber Company from damages which it might suffer by reason of the injunction pending, and the second bond given to the Clerk of Court for Georgetown County conditioned to pay such damages as might be suffered or which theretofore had been suffered by any and all persons who were employed by the defendant-respondent (Huntley-Richardson Lumber Company) as of date March 28, 1933, and further gave the right to the plaintiff Metcalf to deposit in lieu of surety bonds the cash required by said order with the Clerk of Court, and the plaintiff Metcalf deposited with the Clerk of Court of Georgetown County the sum of $10,000.00 in cash, pursuant to the order of the Chief Justice.

The Supreme Court decided that the order of Judge Stoll was a correct one and affirmed that order and in that way *354 vacated the injunction granted by Judge Ramage which was set aside by the order of Judge Stoll but restored by the order of the Chief Justice, thereby preventing the lumber company from continuing its operations. The history of these various steps is also to be found in the case of Metcalf v. Huntley-Richardson Lumber Company, supra.

The attorneys for the lumber company, who also are the attorneys, in part, for the laborers, sought to be protected under the order, then moved before Judge Shipp for an order of reference to determine the damages suffered by the employees in the cause. Upon the call of this motion the attorney for Metcalf took the position that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the matter and that only the Supreme Court could designate the referee. Judge Shipp overruled this contention, and then the attorney for Metcalf moved before Chief Justice Blease again for an order of super-sedeas staying the holding of the reference until the Supreme Court passed upon the plaintiff's appeal from the order of Judge Shipp. This matter was heard before the Supreme Court on November 13, 1933, and in a per curiam order the appeal was dismissed.

No other position was taken by the attorney for Metcalf in opposition to the order save and except the one above outlined.

The order of Judge Shipp appointed C. W. Muldrow, Esq., of Florence County, a lawyer learned in the law and with much experience in equity matters, to hear and determine the matter as Special Master, and the Special Master called a reference at which considerable testimony was taken to establish the claims of the employees. The bpolcs of the company were offered in evidence and numbers, but not all, of the employees were sworn. This, however, was by an agreement by and between counsel to the effect that all of the employees, if sworn, would testify to the same purport as those who had been sworn. This was done presumably for the purpose of shortening the ref *355 erence and, of course, having agreed to this, counsel for all. parties are bound thereby.

The amount of the bond given by Metcalf is only $3,-000.00, and the Referee has found that the amount of damage done to the employees was $7,633.11 or that the amount of damage to the employees was $4,633.11 more than the bond. This report of the Special Referee was taken before Judge Grimball, who passed his order to the effect that the employees were not parties to the action and, therefore, were not properly before the Court, and he dismissed the proceeding without specifically ruling upon any other question raised.

There are several interesting questions involoved in this appeal which we will discuss in an effort to reach a logical and equitable conclusion as to rights of all parties interested in this branch of the case.

1. Have the employees the right to prove their claims in this action?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.E. 371, 174 S.C. 350, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-metcalf-sc-1934.