52 S.C. 176 | S.C. | 1898
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought this action of claim and delivery, in a trial justice court, to recover from the defendant a horse, a wagon and harness, and a lap-robe, or the value thereof. The plaintiff having obtained judgment for the lap-robe only, appealed to the Circuit Court, upon the several grounds set out in the “Case;” and upon hearing the appeal, his Honor, Judge Ernest Gary, sustained the fourth and six grounds, and ordered a new trial. From that judgment defendant appeals upon the several grounds set out in the record, and the plaintiff, according to the proper practice, gave notice that he would ask this Court to sustain the judgment of Judge Gary upon additional grounds, which are likewise set out in the record.
It appears that on the night of the 9th of November, 1894, certain state constables seized the horse, wagon and harness, and lap-robe of the plaintiff, upon the ground that the same were being used in the transportation of contraband liquor in the night time, in violation of sec. 38 of the act, known as the dispensary law of 1893, 21 Stat., at page 448, which is incorporated in the Criminal Statutes as sec. 474, 2 Rev. Stat., p. 427, and the same were turned over to the defendant as sheriff of Anderson County, who, upon demand, refused to deliver the said property to the plaintiff. On the trial before the trial justice it was admitted that plaintiff had “been tried on the criminal side of the court and acquitted for hauling the liquor seized with wagon in this case.”
The fourth and sixth grounds of appeal from the judgment of the trial justice, which were sustained by Judge Ernest Gary, read as follows: “4. Because the’trial justice
The appellant’s grounds of appeal from the judgment of Judge Gary, impute error to him in sustaining those two grounds. There was no controversy either before the trial justice or before the Circuit Court as to the fact that the property in dispute originally belonged to the plaintiff, and the defendant based his defense solely upon the ground that said property “was confiscated to the State,” under sec. 38 of the dispensary act of 1893, incorporated in the Rev. Stat, 474. That section reads as follows: “Any wagon, cart, boat or other conveyance transporting contraband liquor at night, other than regular passenger or freight steamers and railway cars, shall be liable to seizure arid confiscation; and to that end the officer shall cause the same to be appraised by three disinterested citizens, and unless recovered by claim and delivery proceedings, and suitable bond, shall be advertised and sold, and proceeds sent to the state commissioner.” The section immediately preceding the section just quoted reads of follows: “Sec. 37. Any person handling contraband liquor in the night time, or delivering the same, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be punished by imprisonment for thirty days or $100 fine.” And it was ynder this section 37 that it was admited that^ plaintiff was tried and acquitted, “for hauling the liquor
The sixth ground of plaintiff’s appeal from the judgment of the trial justice, while open to the criticism of appellant’s counsel, in one respect, viz: in stating that the defendant admitted that the plaintiff and his drayman were tried and acquitted for hauling contraband liquor at night, “on the same facts set forth and proven in this case,” the admission of the defendant being that plaintiff “had been tried and acquitted for hauling the liquor seized with the wagon in this casé;” yet, as it is clear, as we have seen, that the jury were instructed by the trial justice, that “even though the facts were the same,” they could not consider the fact of the previous acquittal of the plaintiff, we do not see that such well-founded criticism adds any strength to appellant’s case. The error of law imputed to the Circuit Judge in sustaining plaintiff’s sixth ground of appeal from the judgment of the trial justice, is that the Circuit Judge should have held “that the plaintiff could not recover the property sought to be recovered by him without proving his right to recover independent of the fact that he had been tried and acquitted on a charge of transporting the liquors in question in the night time.” This, practically, raises the same question as that hereinbefore considered. To say that the Judge should have held that plaintiff could not recover without proving his right to the property “independent of
Under this view of the case, it becomes unnecessary to consider the questions raised by the additional grounds upon which the plaintiff gave notice that he would ask this Court to affirm the judgment of the Circuit Judge.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be, and the same is hereby, affirmed.