48 S.E. 283 | S.C. | 1904
July 2, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This action is for the recovery of the value of a bale of cotton which plaintiff alleges the defendants, Moore Barnes, bought from her tenant, William Priester, with notice that the cotton was subject to her lien for rent. Judgment was demanded for sixty dollars, the value of the cotton, and two hundred dollars vindictive damages. The jury found a verdict for forty dollars for the plaintiff, and defendants appeal.
In the first and second exceptions the defendants submit the presiding Judge erred in refusing to charge the jury: "That if the jury find that Moore, Barnes Co. bought the bale of cotton in dispute, then Moore Barnes would not be liable for same, Moore, Barnes Co. being one firm and Moore Barnes being another, each distinct and separate from the other." This request was refused on the ground that it would be a charge on the facts. Under the peculiar facts of the case, this view of the Circuit Judge was correct. The tenant, William Priester, had obtained from Moore Barnes an advance of forty dollars under an agricultural lien. The new firm of Moore, Barnes Co. in June of the same year had succeeded to the business of Moore Barnes, but did not purchase the lien debt of Priester. Mrs. Barnes was a member of both firms and there was testimony to the effect that her husband was manager of the business of both. There was testimony tending to prove that at the instance of Barnes, the manager, Priester, plaintiff's tenant, was urged to deliver cotton to pay his debt to the old firm of Moore Barnes. The tenant testified that he did deliver and sell the bale of cotton to Barnes for the old firm in payment of his debt. The purchase money was $42.97, of which $40.12 was applied in full payment of the debt and the remainder, $2.85, paid to the tenant. It is true, there was testimony to the effect that the cotton was purchased by Moore, Barnes Co., and not by the defendants, Moore Barnes, but the testimony also tended to show *352 that the cotton was delivered by the tenant and received by Barnes for the account of Moore Barnes, that firm taking the actual benefit of the transaction.
If the defendants, with notice of the plaintiff's lien, had the tenant to deliver the cotton to the purchasers, Moore, Barnes Co., received the purchase money, and applied it to their own debt, they would be most active participants in the wrongful disposition of the cotton, and would be liable. Hence we think the Circuit Judge was right in refusing to charge that the defendants would not be liable unless they actually purchased the cotton. Under the principle stated inHeath v. Haile,
The third exception alleges error in refusing the same request, because such refusal left the jury without instructions as to whether those who bought the cotton or those who received the proceeds would be liable. No request was made for the Circuit Judge to make such a distinction more definitely, and hence the exception cannot be sustained.
The views above expressed dispose also of the exceptions charging error in the denial of the motion for a new trial, made on the ground that the verdict had nothing to support it, there being no evidence that the defendants purchased the cotton. There was, in fact, much positive evidence that the sale was made to the defendants, but assuming that there was no such evidence and giving the fullest effect to the admission of plaintiff's counsel that "Moore, Barnes Co. bought the cotton and not Moore Barnes," but that the money was applied to the account of Moore Barnes," there was no error of law in refusing the new trial, because there was evidence that the defendants procured the delivery of the cotton to the purchaser and received the purchase money to the amount of the verdict, and thus participated in the tort with *353 notice of plaintiff's lien. The fourth and fifth exceptions are, therefore, overruled.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.