Holladay v. Hodge

88 S.E. 282 | S.C. | 1916

February 29, 1916. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Plaintiff sued defendant on a bond and the Circuit Court directed a verdict for the plaintiff.

The bond was made pursuant to an order of Mr. Justice Woods, and the only issue before the Circuit Court was had the bond been breached.

The cause has been much litigated. See 84 S.C. 91,65 S.E. 952; 84 S.C. 109, 65 S.E. 1019, and 90 S.C. 106,72 S.E. 884. The history of it, therefore, needs not to be much repeated in this place. *313

The plaintiff was a farm laborer, he worked the defendant's lands in 1908, he was not paid; he sued the defendant to judgment, and secured the appointment of a receiver to hold the crop and pay his judgment.

Mr. Justice Woods stayed the execution of the order appointing a receiver until this Court could determine if it was rightly allowed; and pending that decision (which turned out to be an affirmance of the order) Mr. Justice Woods exacted a bond from the defendant; and that is the instrument now sued on. The bond will be reported, as will the order of Mr. Justice Woods.

Whether the bond has been breached, depends upon the meaning of the entire instrument, to be gathered from the words of it. And the bond must be read in the light of the order which directed it to be made, and in the light of the controversy out of which the order sprang.

Holladay had recovered a judgment before a magistrate against Hodge for $48.00, and was proceeding to satisfy it out of the crops then in Hodge's hands; first by those processes available to a magistrate's Court, which processes were halted by prohibition of the Circuit Judge; and next by remedy of a receivership, which remedy was presently halted by an appeal and the allowance of this order in issue.

The judgment for Holladay's debt was affirmed by this Court; the order of prohibition was reversed by this Court; the order appointing a receiver was affirmed by this Court.

The order of Justice Woods directed that the bond be so conditioned that Hodge should hold Holladay (1) harmless from any loss that might occur by reason of the order, and (2) pay to Holladay any sum which it may be finally adjudged Holladay is entitled to recover from the crops, and (3) together with the costs incident to said recovery. The numerals are added. The bond followed the words of the order.

The issue made by the appeal is (1) that Hodge ought not to have been denied, as he was denied, the right to *314 prove in the present action, that even if Holladay had got hold of the crops yet prior liens upon them would have prevented any payment upon his judgment; and (2) the bond was not conditioned to indemnify the plaintiff for the three appeals and the other costs in the several actions, but only to stand in place of the crop.

The defendant's view of the issue was also stated by Mr. Jennings at the trial of this case on Circuit and pending a direction of the verdict.

He then said: "We want to state on the record that our contention is that this bond does not cover Supreme Court costs and costs of that kind, but simply provides to hold the plaintiff harmless by reason of this particular order in this proceeding, and the costs taxed in the case incidental in this particular matter are not covered by this bond, and they are only entitled to $48 and interest on that."

They would confine the plaintiff to one procedure on the whole case, and that to appoint a receiver.

Before this action on the bond there was only one case, that by Holladay against Hodge, to collect a debt for labor done. Hodge carried that case to this Court and lost, Holladay proceeded in that case to subject the crops to payment of the debt; and Hodge halted that remedy by prohibition, and that was tried in this Court too, and Hodge lost. Holladay then proceeded in the same case to have a receiver take the crops and pay the debt due to him; and Hodge halted that remedy, and then substituted the bond in issue.

So it is one case with many features, and Holladay won on the whole case. The several issues made in the cause and fought out are not separable. Hodge was not willing for the contest to proceed on the lines Holladay marked out. He halted Hodge, and put the bond to answer the final event.

That instrument holds the makers to pay "the costs incident to the said recovery." *315

Part of the recovery was to sustain the judgment for the debt; that was done and it is not denied that the bond must respond to that.

Another part of the recovery was to sustain the procedure before the magistrate to subject the crops to that judgment.

Another part of the recovery was to have a receiver to take the crops and pay the debt.

At the wind up, when all the plaintiff's demands in the one case have been sustained; and after a bond was exacted by the Court to pay costs incident to such a recovery; the answer is, there was no use of a bond because if the plaintiff had proceeded unmolested in all his remedies he could not have collected his debt, because the crop belongs to another.

When the bondsman came betwixt the contending parties, and halted the order of the contest, he can hardly escape liability by saying the party plaintiff would have lost at all events. The record estops him to say that.

The argument of the appellant that had no bond been given the plaintiff's position would have been no worse, is begging the question. The bond was given, and it betters the plaintiff's position.

The exceptions are overruled and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.

MR. JUSTICE FRASER was disqualified and did not sit in this case. *316