114 S.E. 408 | S.C. | 1922
October 9, 1922. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The defendants contracted with the plaintiff to rent a hotel in the city of Spartanburg, and gave a bond to secure faithful performance. This action was brought by plaintiff to recover damages on account of the alleged breach of the bond. The defendants admitted the execution of the rental contract and of the bond, but set up the defense that the *428 contract was procured by misrepresentation and fraud. The case was tried before Hon. Edward McIver, Circuit Judge, and a jury. From judgment on verdict for defendants, the plaintiff appeals.
Certain of the allegations of the answer were to the effect that defendants were induced to execute the rental contract and the bond by plaintiff's false representation that the hotel was a "first-class, clean, reputable, and paying enterprise", that in fact the "hotel had a bad reputation, and, directly after defendants took charge of the same, a number of persons approached them for the purpose of renting rooms for immoral purposes"; and that, "when they became aware of the reputation of the hotel, they promptly declined to retain same, and turned the hotel back to the plaintiff."
1. Appellant's first contention (exceptions 1 to 5, inclusive) is that the trial Judge erred in admitting over objection certain testimony of the defendants in regard to conversations with third parties not held in the presence of the plaintiff. It is suggested that these conversations were hearsay, and amounted merely to self-serving declarations on the part of the defendants. The record discloses that no specific grounds of objection to the admission of the testimony were stated at the trial. A ground of objection not ruled upon by the trial Judge cannot be urged in this Court. Allen v. Cooley,
The only ruling of the presiding Judge appears to have been to the effect that Mrs. Lee, one of the defendants, could testify that "she found that men were calling up" certain girls registered at the hotel, and that "she found it was a fact that people went there for dissolute practices." The testimony related to transactions which tended in some measure to establish that the use of *429 the hotel was sought with more or less frequency for immoral purposes on account of its former repute and practices. If so, it related to an issue directly made by the pleadings. The relevancy of testimony is largely within the discretion of the trial Judge, and we are satisfied there was no erroneous exercise of his discretion.
2. The appellant's second contention is that the presiding Judge's definition of fraud in his charge to the jury was erroneous in that it omitted the essential element of scienter. The Judge used, with elaboration, the following definition:
"Fraud is where one deceives another and causes him to do something which he would not otherwise have done by misrepresenting a fact, by making a false statement, or by failing to speak when equity and good conscience require one to speak."
In the absence of any request for a more specific instruction, the charge was sufficiently definite and comprehensive for the purposes of the case on trial. It does not appear that the validity of the defense in this case dependent on proof of actual fraud as distinguished from legal or constructive fraud. In any view, having failed to make the contention now made in this Court the subject of a definite request to charge in the Court below, plaintiff is not in position to impute error. Honour v. So.Pub. U. Co.,
3. The appellant's third contention (exceptions 8, 9, and 10) is substantially that there was no evidence to support the verdict, and that the verdict was contrary to the Judge's charge. The record does not disclose that either a motion for nonsuit, for a directed verdict generally, or for a new trial was made in the Court below. The attention of appellant's counsel is directed to rule 77 of the Circuit Court (73 S.E., vii). The Circuit Judge not *430
having ruled upon any of the points raised by these exceptions, they cannot, of course, be considered for the first time in this Court. Brock v. Haley Co.,
All of the exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.