Court Opinion

ID: 6675531
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:15:30.540015+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:09:21.433220
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mr. Justice McIver.
On December 3d, 1881, Wells, defendant herein, commenced an action against McClendon, the plaintiff herein, to recover the sum of $205.06, the value of certain goods advanced by one Pope to McClendon, at the request and upon the credit of Wells. At the time of commencing said action, Wells sued out a warrant of attachment, under which the sheriff’s deputy, on December 6th, 1881, seized certain chattels, as the property of McClendon, viz., one road wagon, one bay mare, one black mule and about 150 bushels of cotton-seed, which were duly appraised at the sum of $273. On December 12th, 1881, the attorneys of McClendon made a motion before the clerk to dissolve the attachment for irregularity, which motion was refused, and no appeal was taken therefrom.
*517On December 15th, 1881, Wells took an assignment, in writing, from Moore, Quarles & Co., of a note and mortgage given by McClendon to said Moore, Quarles & Co. on November 19th, 1881. The note was for the sum of $500, and was due on the day of its date, and the mortgage given to secure the payment of said note covered all the property seized under the attachment, except the cotton-seed, as well as other property of McClendon. On December 17th, 1881, Wells had the sheriff to release the attachment and paid the costs on the same, and on the same day Wells appointed, in writing, the same deputy who had levied the attachment, his agent, to take possession of the property embraced in the mortgage and dispose of the same according to law. On the same day the deputy delivered the cotton-seed, which, as has been mentioned, was not embraced in the mortgage to McClendon, but retained the other property seized under the attachment, by virtue of his authority as agent of Wells, the assignee of the original mortgagees, Moore, Quarles & Co., and after duly advertising sold the same at public auction for $231, cash. Out of this sum the deputy paid the expenses of keeping the stock and of the sale, and the balance, to wit, the sum of $200.75, was credited on the mortgage. On March 1st, 1882, the action which had' been commenced by Wells against Mc-Clendon to recover the amount of the account for $205.06, was discontinued on the payment of costs.
The action herein was commenced on September 11th, 1882, and was brought upon the undertaking, which was in the sum of $250, executed by Wells when he sued out the warrant of attachment hereinabove mentioned. The complaint, after setting out the commencement of the original action,.the issuing of the warrant of attachment and the execution of said undertaking, alleged: “ That the said writ of attachment was illegally issued and obtained ; that the suit instituted was never reduced to judgment, but abandoned; that under said writ of attachment property, consisting of mules, horses and wagons, was seized and illegally disposed of, of the value of $800; the condition of the said bond mentioned in paragraph two of this complaint, has been broken to the damage of this plaintiff $1,000.” Then, after setting forth that a copy of said bond or undertaking was filed with the *518complaint as a part thereof, demanded judgment for $1,000 damages and for costs. The answer, after denying all the allegations in the complaint as to the illegality of the attachment, and denying that any property was ever sold under the attachment, set up as a counter-claim the note and mortgage hereinbefore mentioned given by McClendon to Moore, Quarles & Co., and by them assigned to Wells, and claimed judgment for the balance due thereon. The reply of the plaintiff was a general denial of all the allegations of the answer in reference to the counter-claim.
Testimony was offered tending to show that though the note, secured by mortgage, of McClendon to Moore, Quarles & Co. was on its face for $500, yet the amount really due was only $85.65, and while it did not distinctly appear what was the object in giving the note for an amount so much larger than was really due, there were' circumstances pointing to the conclusion that McClendon’s purpose was to shield his property from his creditors, especially from Wells. It also appeared in evidence that Wells only paid Moore, Quarles & Co. $85.65 for the note when it was assigned to him, though it did not distinctly appear that Wells, when he bought the note, had notice that it was given for a much larger amount than was really due, but the reasonable inference would be, that he must have known it, or at least had very good reason to suspect that such was the fact. It also appeared in evidence that McClendon made a tender to Wells of $85.65, as the amount due on the note secured by the mortgage, the date of which tender was fixed by one of the witnesses as January 1st, 1882, but a few days before the sale- under the mortgage, and of course, therefore, after the breach of the condition of the mortgage.
The Circuit judge charged the jury that the action was on the attachment bond, and “ if Wells was actuated by any malice in obtaining the attachment with a view to injuring McClendon, the jury could give punitive damages; but, if there was no malice, then they could give only the actual damages sustained, not exceeding the penalty of the bond. If Pope sold goods of the value of $205.06 to McClendon in the name of Wells, and solely on his credit, it was Wells’ debt to Pope and McClendon’s *519debt to Wells, and Wells had a good cause of action. The affidavit upon which the attachment was issued ivas clearly insufficient, and the action having been discontinued, the attachment was illegal. When Wells released the attachment it was his duty to return the property. The defendant does not ask for the $205.06 he paid Pope for McClendon, but he sets up as a defense a bond and mortgage under which he sold the property. The bond and mortgage were transferred to Wells after due, and if only $85.65 were due to Moore, Quarles & Co., Wells can stand upon no better ground than Moore, Quarles & Co., and McClendon cannot suffer. The taking and selling of McClendon’s property by Wells, under the mortgage, for more than he paid Moore, Quarles & Co. for the bond and mortgage, viz., $85.65, was a trespass, for which the defendant was liable in this action. If McClendon offered Wells $85.65, this was a good tender, but it does not do away with the debt. All'that Wells was entitled to was $85.65, and this he has been paid out of the proceeds of the sale under the mortgage. That the jury could give the plaintiff the value of the property sold under the mortgage, less the $85.65 Wells paid for the mortgage, subject, however, to the limit of the attachment, which was $250.”
In response to an inquiry from .the jury, whether the defendant was liable for the $200.75 credited on the mortgage, the Circuit judge charged them, “that the defendant was so liable in this action, and they could give the full value of the property sold under the mortgage, less the $85.65, but not to exceed the penalty of the bond, and that this action terminated Wells’ liability under the mortgage.”
The defendant’s request to charge raised an abstract question which we do not think applies to the case, under the view which we take of it, and therefore need not be specially considered. The defendant appeals on numerous grounds, which need not be set out here, as we do not propose to consider them seriatim, but simply to adjudge what we regard the material questions in the case.
It is conceded that the action in this case was based solely on the undertaking or bond executed by the defendant when he sued out the warrant of attachment. The condition of this bond, as *520stated in the complaint, was “ for the payment to the said W. T. McClendon of all damages, costs and charges which might accrue to the said W. T. McClendon by reason of the issuing and obtaining the writ of attachment aforesaid, and all damages consequent to him from any illegality in obtaining and suing out the same.” It was, therefore, not an action of tort to recover damages for trespass, but it was an action ex contractu, based upon the obligation assumed by the defendant in the undertaking, to pay all such damages as the plaintiff might sustain by reason of any illegality in the attachment. The measure of the damages, therefore, which the plaintiff was entitled to recover, was the amount to which he had been injured by the illegal seizure of his property under the attachment. He was entitled to compensation for his losses — not to have the defendant punished for his illegal acts. We think, therefore, that the Circuit judge erred in saying to the jury, that if Wells was actuated by malice in obtaining the attachment with a view to injuring McClendon, they could give punitive damages.
So, too, we think it was error to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could, in this action, recover damages for any alleged trespass in seizing and selling the property under the mortgage. No such cause of action is stated in the complaint, and we are unable to see, under an action on the attachment bond, how the conduct of the defendant in enforcing his mortgage could have properly been considered. But, more than this, Wells having acquired the ownership of the mortgage, stands in the same position as the original mortgagees, and the condition of the mortgage having been broken, he had become the legal owner of the property mortgaged, and entitled to take possession of it wherever he could find it, or retain possession of it, for the purpose of enforcing his rights under the mortgage. Flenniken v. Scruggs, 15 S. C. 88 ; Reese v. Lyon, ante,p. 17, and the authorities there cited. In doing so, he would not become a trespasser, and liable to an action for damages as such, but the remedy of McClendon, if he felt himself aggrieved, would be to bring an action to redeem the mortgaged property before the sale took place, or after the sale to bring his action for an account of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property, in either of *521which actions McClendon Avould be required to pay, not only the amount secured by the mortgage, but also any other debt' which might be due by him to Wells. Reese v. Lyon, supra.
The tender of the alleged amount due, even if it had been of the full sum due, could not luwe the effect of revesting the title to the mortgaged property in the mortgagor, as it was made after condition broken. Reese v. Lyon, supra, and the authorities therein cited. But, besides this, the mortgage debt was an interest-bearing demand, and no interest was tendered, nor were the costs and expenses attending the seizure of the property tendered, which should have been done, as the alleged tender was made after such seizure and after expenses had been incurred in keeping the mortgaged animals.
Wells being, as we have seen, the legal owner of the mortgaged property, as soon as the condition of the mortgage was broken, Avas under no obligation to return such property when the, attachment was released, for, as such OAvner, he had a right to take it into his possession wherever he could find it, provided he committed no violation of the criminal law in so doing, and, of course, he had the right to retain possession of it.
Next, as to the plaintiff’s defense to the defendant’s counterclaim. The rule is, that a general denial only puts in issue such facts as it is necessary for the plaintiff (or the defendant, when he puts in a counter-claim,) to prove in order to establish his cause of action; and if the defendant, or the plaintiff, as the case may be, desires to establish and rely upon any affirmative defense, he must plead such defense, and cannot, under a general denial, be permitted to go into evidence to establish such defense. In this case, all that the defendant was required to prove in order to establish his counter-claim, Avas the execution of the note and mortgage and the assignment by the original mortgagees to him; and the plaintiff by simply putting in a general denial Avas not at liberty to introduce evidence to establish the affirmative defense upon which he relied. The note being under seal, of itself imported a consideration, and if the plaintiff desired to show that by fraud, misrepresentation, or otherwise, he Avas induced to sign a note for a much larger amount than Avas really due, he should have specially pleaded such defense, so as to *522advertise the defendant of the issue he would have to meet. Pom. Rem., § 660, p. 692; Lyles v. Bolles, 8 S. C. 258 ; Pender v. Lancaster, 3188. Dec., No. 748, filed June 25th, 1879. But, as the case must go back for a new trial, we think it right, under the liberal provisions of the code, that the plaintiff should have' an opportunity, if he so desires, of amending his reply so as to-set up any affirmative defense he may desire to the counterclaim.
We do not think that the fifth and sixth grounds of appeal can be sustained. The paper objected to was a written' admission of the original mortgagees of the amount really due, bearing date prior to the transfer to the defendant, and was, therefore, clearly admissible; and the fact of the death of one of the' mortgagees, even if it would have any effect, nowhere appears in the case and cannot be considered.
The sixth ground is based upon a misapprehension evidently. The defendant, by his pleading, admitted the execution of the attachment undertaking, inasmuch as it was alleged in the complaint and not denied in the answer, and, therefore, there was no-necessity to introduce any evidence upon that point.
The judgment of this court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial, with leave to the plaintiff to amend his-reply as herein indicated.