127 S.E. 436 | S.C. | 1925
Lead Opinion
March 11, 1925. The opinion of the Court was delivered by As these two cases are in all respects similar, except as to the amounts claimed, our decision will be confined to the first case only, it being understood that our conclusion applies with equal force to the second case also.
In December, 1919, the defendant signed a subscription to the capital stock of the plaintiff for 10 shares of the par value of $100 each. Payment was to be made as follows: Twenty per cent. upon organization and the balance in payments not exceeding 10 per cent. at intervals of not less than 60 days. There was considerable delay in raising the required *347 capital stock and the charter was not granted by the Secretary of State until February 3, 1922.
On September 2, 1922, this action was brought to recover the sum of $600, it being claimed that that amount was due upon the stock subscription of the defendant at the time of serving the complaint. The answer of the defendant admitted the corporate existence of the plaintiff, denied all other allegations of the complaint, and set forth several defenses which will be more particularly referred to hereafter. Prior to the day of trial, the attorneys for the plaintiff served notice of a motion to amend the complaint by demanding $1,000 instead of $600, stating that since the filing of the complaint the remaining amount due upon the subscription had become due. Over the objection of the defendant's attorney, the motion was granted. Upon exception to the ruling of the presiding Judge, the following appears in the record:
"The Court: Mr. Waring, I am going to grant the motion, and if you are surprised and cannot make a proper defense to the complaint as presented (amended?) I will grant you a continuance.
"Mr. Waring: I cannot state that, your Honor."
Exceptions 1 and 2 impute error on the part of the trial Judge in allowing the amendment, the position of the defendant being that as the balance of the subscription became due after the filing of the complaint that the plaintiff should have sought leave of the Court to file a supplemental complaint rather than amend his original one. As opposed to this view, the plaintiff says that the power of amendment rests solely in the discretion of the presiding Judge and, also, as the defendant was not taken by surprise and did not avail himself of the offer to continue the case, he cannot be heard to complain.
That the defendant was not surprised in this matter is conclusively shown by the very candid statement of his counsel. What, however, would have been the *348 effect of his acceptance of the offer of the trial Judge? It would have amounted to an abandonment of his objection that the amendment was improper, and this could not be forced upon him. An acceptance of the offer to continue would have been an acknowledgment of the correctness of the ruling of the Court and a waiver of the objection in so far as future trials were concerned.
The question, therefore, is strictly as to whether or not the amendment was proper, and to this we will now direct our inquiry. In 21 R.C.L., 503, the following statement is sustained by many authorities:
"It is the office of a supplemental pleading to bring forward facts that have transpired since the institution of the suit."
In 31 Cyc. 499, the rule is thus stated:
"The rights of parties to an action are ordinarily to be determined by the state of facts existing at the time of its commencement. If new matter subsequently arises, it cannot ordinarily be introduced under the original pleadings, or be brought in by amendment; but should be taken advantage of by a supplemental pleading."
The rule is likewise pronounced as established law in Bliss on Code Pleading (3d Ed.), § 432. These authorities are cited merely to show the general and undisputed rule on the subject. Recourse will not be had to the decisions of our own court of last resort.
The leading case on the subject is McCaslan v. Latimer,
"Both amendments and supplemental pleadings are provided for in the Code, but there is a marked distinction between the two. They are allowed upon different conditions and are intended to meet different contingencies. They are not interchangeable remedies, to be employed indifferently at the choice of the pleader, but distinct and separate proceedings, each depending upon its own principles *349 and governed by its own facts. Where the one is required, it is error to substitute the other."
Further, considering the two sections of the Code relating to amendments and supplemental pleadings and the difference between them, the opinion says:
"The mind would reach this conclusion simply upon reading these different sections and without the aid of commentators. But when we find that the best annotators of the Code have placed this construction upon these sections, this view is not only strengthened and confirmed, but is left without doubt."
Other authorities cited by the then Chief Justice in this case are equally clear and convincing.
Again the same Chief Justice says in Moon v. Johnson,
"Facts accruing after suit brought cannot be inserted under any circumstances in the original complaint by way of amendment."
In Ex parte Maurice,
It may be urged that the defendant was in no way injured by the trial Judge's ruling, and that no benefit but only delay will result from sustaining the objection of the appellant. We are willing to rest our conclusion upon the following excerpt from the Maurice Case, supra:
"The case seems to have been long delayed, and no doubt it is important that it should be brought to a close, and as the order in question was passed to the end that progress should be made, so that a final adjudication should be had at an early day, we would be glad to affirm it; but not finding any legal authority for such an order in the rules prescribing the practice in such cases, it must be reversed."
As we see no good reason to disturb such a well-recognized rule of pleading, the exceptions to this ruling on the part of the trial Judge are sustained. *350
Exceptions 3, 6, and 9 charge error on the part of the trial Judge in his rulings relating to the validity of the stock subscriptions. The appellant contends that no board of corporators had been formed, and that the subscription was invalid for that reason. It will be noted that, between the dates of the stock subscription and the actual formation of the corporation, the statute law relating to the formation of corporations had been changed, and that the old law was no longer in effect. Of necessity the corporation was formed under the new law which did not provide for a board of corporators. The subscription was necessarily made before the corporation was formed, and the validity of such subscriptions is fully sustained by the recent case of Seacoast Packing Co. v. Long,
The fifth exception charges error in not granting the motion for a directed verdict for the defendant upon the ground that the corporation called for the payment of the subscriptions in a manner different from that contained in the subscription itself. There would be force in this position were it not for the fact that the plaintiff gave to the defendant far more time to pay than he would have had under the terms of the subscription. The defendant can hardly complain of this leniency.
The seventh exception charges error on the part of the trial Judge in not granting the motion for a directed verdict for the defendant upon the ground that more than two years had elapsed between the time of taking the subscription and the date of the charter. To sustain this point, the appellant relies upon Section 4261 of the 1922 Code, as follows:
"(4261) § 12. To Organize in Two Years. — If any private corporation hereafter created by the General Assembly, incorporated under any law, does not organize and commence the transaction of its business within two years *351 from the date of its incorporation or the date of the commission appointing the board of corporators, its corporate powers shall cease."
For two reasons this exception cannot be sustained. In the first place it is a provision applicable only to corporations "created by the General Assembly" and the plaintiff was created by the Secretary of State. Hence the provision does not apply. In the second place, should the exception be sustained, we would be forced to hold that the corporate powers of the plaintiff had ceased. This would be opposed to the rule that the corporate existence cannot be attacked collaterally. See City Council v. Railroad,
In order that this opinion may not be unduly prolonged we may add that all exceptions have been carefully considered and overruled, except as herein stated.
It is accordingly ordered that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and a new trial granted, unless the plaintiff shall within 10 days after the filing of the remittitur in the Circuit Court remit on the judgment record, as of the date of the verdicts, the sum of $400 in the first case, and the sum of $800 in the second case, and that upon the entry of such remission the judgment of the Circuit *352 Court stand affirmed, without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff to bring a proper proceeding for collection of the additional installments alleged to be due on the stock subscriptions, and as to which the amendment was erroneously granted.
MESSRS. JUSTICES FRASER and MARION concur.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MR. JUSTICE T.P. COTHRAN did not participate.
Dissenting Opinion
I think all exceptions should be overruled and judgment affirmed.