158 S.E. 742 | N.C. | 1931
The plaintiff, a resident of Richmond County, brought suit against the defendants to recover damages for the alleged wrongful seizure and conversion of his automobile. In his complaint he alleges that on 21 February, 1930, he bought the car from Lewis Motor Sales, Inc., of Montgomery County, and held possession of it as owner until 6 October, 1930; that on 2 October, 1930, the defendant Haywood, in the capacity of clerk, issued from the Superior Court of Montgomery County a paper purporting to be an execution in an action entitled *40 J. H. Hilyard v. Troy Motors, Inc., and the Commercial Credit Company, and caused it to be delivered to the sheriff of Richmond County; and that by virtue of this execution the defendant Braswell, as sheriff of Richmond County, seized the plaintiff's car and delivered it to the defendant Welch, who removed it to Guilford County.
The plaintiff alleges, in addition, that the action of the clerk in issuing the execution, of the sheriff in seizing the car, and of Welch in carrying it to Guilford County was unlawful, and that he is entitled to the market value of the converted property.
The defendants filed answers and in apt time the defendant Haywood made a motion for removal of the cause against himself to Montgomery County. The motion was allowed, and the cause so far as it relates to the defendant Haywood, as clerk, was removed, the court finding the following facts:
1. That Edgar Haywood is the clerk of the Superior Court of Montgomery County, and as such he issued the execution to the sheriff of Richmond County, under and by virtue of which the sheriff of Richmond County seized the automobile of the plaintiff.
2. That the sheriff of Richmond County, acting under and by virtue of said purported execution, seized the plaintiff's automobile in Richmond County.
3. That the plaintiff is a citizen and resident of Richmond County, and the execution was served on him in Richmond County.
The plaintiff excepted to the order of removal and appealed. The appeal raises a question, not of jurisdiction, but of venue — the county in which the facts relied on are alleged to have occurred, or in which the cause of action arose.
The place of trial is regulated by statute. C. S., 463 et seq. Subject to statutory exceptions an action may be tried in the county in which the plaintiff or the defendant resides at the time the action is commenced (C. S., 469; McFadden v. Maxwell,
The defendant Braswell is a public officer of Richmond County and the defendant Haywood is a public officer of Montgomery County. Obviously, therefore, we cannot literally apply the provisions of section 464 unless the alleged causes of action are separable in the sense *41 of being so mutually independent as to authorize their separation and the removal of one cause to the county of Montgomery.
We recognize the principle that a plaintiff cannot change the venue of an action to the prejudice of the defendant and against his will by uniting two causes having different venues. Cedar Works v. Lumber Co.,
According to the answer of the defendant Haywood, the execution was prepared by an attorney in Richmond County and forwarded to the clerk in Montgomery, who immediately signed and returned it to the attorney in Richmond. Conceding without deciding that as against the clerk the cause of action arose in Montgomery County, while it is difficult to reconcile apparently inconsistent provisions of the statutes, we are of opinion that the action can be maintained against all of the defendants in the county in which it was instituted. In Sherrod et al. v. Dawson,
In McCullen v. R. R.,
In the case before us all the allegations in the complaint relate primarily to one transaction, the wrongful sale of the plaintiff's property. The evidence as to the execution will be relevant on the trial against all the defendants. If the order of removal stands there will be a possibility of conflicting verdicts and judgments — a judgment in Montgomery for or against the clerk and a judgment contra in Richmond as to the sheriff; whereas the liability of these officers may be dependent, or at least in part, upon the validity or invalidity of the execution. As suggested in McCullen's case the spirit, if not the letter of the law, would be met by disposing of the whole controversy in one trial.
The order of removal as to the defendant Haywood is
Reversed.