103 S.E. 516 | S.C. | 1920
June 28, 1920. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The appeal is from a formal order of the Circuit Court which affirmed the report of a referee.
The issues tried by the referee were both of law and fact, and they arise out of a controversy between the Summerton Live Stock Company, a domestic corporation engaged in the business of keeping a stable, and the Cleveland Manufacturing Company, a North Carolina corporation, engaged in the business of manufacturing wood veneer out of poplar logs, all in Clarendon county, of this State.
The substance of the controversy is the keep of six mules, which keep is alleged to have started early in 1917 and continued up to December 16, 1917, and is alleged to be worth the lump sum of $648.02.
The mules were stabled with the Summerton Company by one Early, a party named in the action, but not served, and now, of course, out of the case.
The mules were used in the logging business, and the Summerton Company thought they were Early's mules.
It turned out that the Cleveland Company had a mortgage on the mules throughout 1917, and on December 6, 1917, it took from Early a deed of conveyance to the mules.
There were many special proceedings and motions had and made in the case before issue was joined before the referee; but they have faded out of view and call for no comment. *189
The plaintiff does not deny that, if it gave credit to Early alone throughout 1917, then the Cleveland Company is not liable therefor.
The plaintiff, however, alleges that throughout 1917 the Cleveland Company was conscious of the keep of the mules by the plaintiff, and that it acquiesced therein, that it benefited thereby, and that it is, therefore, liable in law to pay for the keep.
The referee did not consider those issues, but there is no testimony to sustain the allegation. The manager of the plaintiff testified that he "did not know that the Cleveland Company had anything to do with the conducting the business of Early." And another witness for the plaintiff testified that he made the sale to Early, and he thought Early was in the business for himself.
The plaintiff further alleges that the deed was executed with a fraudulent intent harbored by the grantor and grantee. If that be so, then the deed is void, although by the express words of the printed brief the plaintiff's counsel does not ask that the deed shall be set aside.
There is testimony pro and con upon the issue of fraud and the conclusion of the referee, and the Court thereabout is not manifestly wrong, so that we shall sustain it.
The plaintiff further contends that the deed of December 6th is governed by section 2434 of the Code of Laws, which undertakes to regulate the sale of an entire stock in trade. But that statute expressly refers to the sale of merchandise by a merchant; and the instant transaction was not of that character.
There is no ground, therefore, upon which we can relieve the plaintiff who has fallen into manifestly hard straits. *190
The Cleveland Company has made three exceptions; but the first and second are now of no consequence, for they refer to interlocutory orders not now of substance.
The third exception, split into A and B, is directed first to the allowance by the Court of $71.50, the price of feed supplied to the mules after December 7, 1917, on which day the Cleveland Company took a deed to them.
It is true that, when a person's property is taken from his possession by the unlawful act of an officer, then the person is not liable to pay for the keep of such property in the interim.
But in the instant case the confessed servant of the Cleveland Company had talked with the stable people about the keep, from which the Court was warranted to find that the keep was supplied with the consent of the Cleveland Company. We shall, therefore, not disturb the decree in that particular.
The other fraction, B, of the third exception is directed to an item of $210 which the referee and Court found represented the feed bill and stable hire incurred between December 16, 1917, and January 20, 1918.
The significance of these two dates lies in the circumstance that on the former date the Summerton Company procured to be seized the mules under a writ of attachment in an action then commenced by the Summerton Company against Early to enforce its present right, and in the other circumstance that on the latter date the Cleveland Company (which had meantime intervened to claim its own) took back the mules into its own possession by the execution of a bond pursuant to an order of the Court.
There was no finding that the Cleveland Company was due to pay this item of $210. All that was found was that so much was owing to Early for the keep of the mules in the interim betwixt the dates named. *191
The referee merely expressed the opinion (affirmed by the Court) that the issue of who should be liable to pay this $210 was not before him, but should be reserved until the costs should be taxed.
The Cleveland Company, by the exception B, presses for its present acquittance to pay this item. That company is entitled to so much. The complaint only put in issue the feed bill from Early in 1917 to December 16, 1917 (paragraph 3, first cause of action, and paragraph 3, second cause of action).
The judgment of the Court which finds that the Cleveland Company is liable to pay $71.50 is affirmed.