149 S.E. 316 | S.C. | 1929
November 7, 1929. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an appeal from an order of his Honor, Judge Bonham, sustaining a demurrer interposed by the plaintiff *45 to a certain counterclaim set up by the defendant in his answer. The complaint states two causes of action:
(1) The execution and delivery by the Bank of Olar of a note to the plaintiff for $11,000, dated March 2, 1927, and due November 1, 1927, with interest after maturity at 8 per cent. per annum and attorney's fees, indorsed by thedefendant. Sundry payments are alleged to have been made upon the note, leaving a balance unpaid.
(2) The execution and delivery by the Bank of Olar of a note to the plaintiff for $5,000, dated March 22, 1927, and due December 1, 1927, with interest after maturity at 8 per cent. per annum and attorney's fees, indorsed by thedefendant. Sundry payments are alleged to have been made upon the note, leaving a balance unpaid.
The prayer is for judgment upon the first cause of action for $4,313.02, with interest from November 1, 1927, and 10 per cent, attorney's fees, and upon the second cause of action for $94.37, with interest from December 1, 1927, and 10 per cent. attorney's fees.
The answer, after certain admissions and denials, which are not relevant to the present issue, set up a counterclaim for $100,000 damages based upon the following alleged facts, substantially reproduced:
As collateral security to the notes hereinbefore described, the Bank of Olar had assigned to the plaintiff bank certain notes of various parties, and among them were two notes of one J.P. Harley, dated February 26, 1927, and due, respectively September 1, 1927, and October 1, 1927, for $400.79 and $400, secured by mortgage of crop and personal property. On April 20, 1928, the plaintiff, as pledgee, advertised the sale of the two Harley notes in a newspaper published in the city of Columbia, at public auction at the Courthouse in Columbia, on May 14, 1928, for cash. In the advertisement the Harley notes were described as above and as having been indorsed by the defendant Rizer. The defendant alleges that the notes so advertised did not bear his *46 indorsement, that that fact was known to the bank when it caused the advertisement to be published, and concluded his counterclaim thus:
"The defendant alleges that the publication of said notice by the plaintiff was willful, wanton and in utter disregard of the rights of the defendant, the consequences of which were well known, or should have been, to the plaintiff, in that the publishing of said notice as information to the general public was calculated to, and did, convey the false idea that the defendant was not meeting his obligations, was financially embarrassed, bankrupt or dishonest, all of which greatly embarrassed and handicapped the defendant in financing his business operations, caused creditors to withdraw their usual lines of credit and injured the defendant's reputation in the business world, and by reason of all of the foregoing the defendant has been damaged in the sum of One Hundred Thousand ($100,000.00) Dollars."
The plaintiff demurred to the counterclaim upon many grounds, only one of which we deem it necessary to consider: "(6) In that said alleged counterclaim did not arise out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as a foundation of plaintiff's claim or connected with the subject of the action." The demurrer was sustained by his Honor, Judge Bonham, and from his order the defendant has appealed.
Counsel for the appellant have in due season applied for and obtained permission to review the cases ofNorwood National Bank v. Banks,
The criticism is well founded. The Code provides that a counterclaim must arise out of one of the following causes of action:
"(1) A cause of action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff's claim or connected with the subject of the action.
"(2) In an action arising on contract, any other cause of action arising also on contract, and existing at the commencement of the action."
There is nothing in subdivision 1 of the Section quoted that intimates a purpose to limit the counterclaim to causes of action based upon contracts; the only restriction is that the cause of action which is made the basis of the counterclaim shall have arisen out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff's claim or be connected with the subject of the action; clearly this cause of action may sound either in contract or in tort. If it had been intended that the counterclaim should be limited to causes of action based upon contracts, it would have been easy to insert a condition to that effect as was done in subdivision 2 of the Section; the absence of such a limitation presents a strong inference that none was intended.
In Humbert v. Brisbane,
The case of Haygood v. Boney,
To the same effect is Hughes v. Blakeley,
"Under the Codes, which very generally provide that a demand may be counterclaimed, if it arises out of the (contract or?) transaction sued upon, or is connected with the subject of the action, * * * it is now almost universally held that a claim which fulfils these conditions, may be interposed by defendant, as a counterclaim, although it arises out of or is based upon a tort. * * *" 34 Cyc., 706. *49
"The result is that to-day it is practically the unanimous rule that counterclaims in tort may be interposed in actions of contract when they fulfill the qualifications of the statute. This construction is based on the counterclaim statutes, which commonly specify three things as possible bases of counterclaims, viz.: the contract sued on, the transaction set forth, and the subject of action." 24 R.C.L., 826.
In Rush v. Bank (C.C.A.), 71, folio 102, it was held that the defendant in an action upon a note secured by certain collateral had the right to set up a counterclaim for damages for the wrongful appropriation of the collateral, as based upon a cause of action within the conditions of the counterclaim statute, although a tort. See, also, Cass v.Higenbotam,
The opinions in both of the cases under review were written by the writer of this opinion, and in extenuation, to some extent, of the error into which he fell, it is but fair to say that he was influenced by the declaration of that great master of the law, Chief Justice McIver, in the case of Lenhardt v. French,
In that case the action was by the administrators of Mrs. French, the widow of Jesse French, Sr., upon a note of Jesse French, Jr., which he had given to Mrs. French. Jesse French, Jr., was the principal, if not sole, legatee and devisee under the will of Jesse French, Sr., and in the action upon *50 the note he set up a counterclaim, based upon the alleged fact that Mrs. French had concealed and appropriated a sum of money which belonged to her husband, the right to which passed to the defendant Jesse French, Jr., under said will. Upon the alternative whether the demand of the defendant was in tort or in contract, a controverted issue, the above declaration was made, considering it as in tort. It seems clear that the dismissal of the counterclaim, as based upon a tort, might have been sustained by the consideration that it did not arise out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint, and was not at all connected with the subject of the action. It follows that the two cases under review must be modified in their rulings to conform to the principle above enunciated.
The vital inquiry is whether or not the alleged counterclaim comes within the purview of the statute. Under subdivision 1 of Section 411, a counterclaim is recognized which has for its basis either: (1) a cause of action arising out of the contract sued upon by the plaintiff; (2) a cause of action arising out of the transaction sued upon by the plaintiff; (3) a cause of action connected with the subject of the plaintiff's action.
The statute is broad enough to cover a transaction as well as a contract. Every contract is of course a transaction, but every transaction is not a contract. As the defendant is relying upon his counterclaim as based upon a cause of action arising out of the contract set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff's claim, or connected with the subject of the action, a separate treatment of it as atransaction is unnecessary. The question is, did the alleged cause of action, the basis of the counterclaim, arise out of the contract, or was it connected with the subject of the plaintiff's action?
The contracts set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff's claims were, as stated, two notes of the Bank of Olar, dated March 2, 1927. The *51 tort complained of by the defendant as the basis of his counterclaim is alleged to have been committed on April 20, 1928, almost a year after the consummation of the contracts sued upon. It consisted of the publication of the false statement that the defendant Rizer was an indorser upon two notes which had been assigned by the Bank of Olar as collateral to the notes it had given to the Columbia bank, and was made in the advertisement of the sale of these notes.
For the defendant's cause of action to arise out of the contract sued upon by the plaintiff, there must have been some obligation, express or implied, in the contract, which the plaintiff owed to the defendant, of which in the present case there is a semblance; the obligation is solely that of the defendant upon his indorsement of the notes sued upon. The defendant's cause of action for a libel springs from the alleged breach by the plaintiff of its legal duty not to publish a libel against the defendant; a duty not at all attributable to anything contained in the contract sued upon, but to the law.
In Bliss, Code Pl. (3d Ed.), 562, it is said: "Under the first class, the original action being based upon a contract, if the plaintiff is liable at the suit of the defendantin respect to the same contract, the latter may present his demand by way of counterclaim. * * * Questions of difficulty will seldom arise in respect to this class, as it is easy to determine whether the defendant's demand arises out of the contract in suit."
If the tort does not arise out of the contract set forth in the complaint, or out of the transaction (where a transaction, and not a contract, is set forth as the basis of the complaint), or was not connected with the subject of the action, it is an independent tort and not the subject of a counterclaim. "It was, however, at an early day settled that an injury flowing from independent tort could not be asserted as set-off to a demand founded on contract." 24 R.C.L., 827, citing, Gogel v. Jacoby (Pa.), 5 Serg. R., *52
117, 9 Am. Dec., 339; Price v. Lewis,
"Even under the liberal practice of the Codes, an independent disconnected tort, not forming a part of the transaction sued upon as the basis of the plaintiff's cause of action or connected with the subject of the action, cannot be the basis of a counterclaim." 34 Cyc., 708.
In Glide v. Kayser,
In Merritt v. Finlay,
In Watts v. Gantt,
In Pittman v. Keith (Tex.Civ.App.),
In Kuhn v. Co.,
In Tuthill v. Sherman,
In Jones v. Swank,
In Esbensen v. Hover,
In Bliss on Code Pleading (3d. Ed.), 214, it is said: "The cause of action has been described as being a legal wrong threatened or committed against the complaining party; and the object of the action is to prevent or redress the wrong by obtaining some legal relief. The subject ofthe action is, clearly, neither of these; it is not the wrong which gives the plaintiff the right to ask the interposition of the Court, nor is it that which the Court is asked to do for him, but it must be the matter or thing, differing both from the wrong and the relief, in regard to which the controversy has arisen, concerning which the wrong has been *56 done; and this is, ordinarily, the property, or the contract and its subject-matter, or other thing involved in the dispute." It seems clear that the alleged libel was an independent tort, not at all connected with the notes sued upon, the subject of the action.
In Harberle Co. v. Handrahan,
The judgment of this Court is that the order appealed from be affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WATTS, and MESSRS. JUSTICE BLEASE, STABLER, and CARTER concur.