Court Opinion

ID: 3876520
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:09:21.666376+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:46:42.282252
License: Public Domain

January 18, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In his decree his Honor, the Circuit Judge, uses this language:
"The late South Carolina case of Bartell v. Edwards,113 S.C. 217; 102 S.E., 210, is cited as opposed to these conclusions. It appears to this Court, however, that the decision on the second point passed upon in the Bartell case was not necessary to dispose of the case, and might be regarded as dictum; and it further seems that this case is out of line with the current of authority in this State. No reference *Page 459 
was made to the McFadden case, or the other previous South Carolina cases on the point. An effort was made by the defendant to harmonize this case with the other cases, but the argument was not convincing."
The facts in Bartell v. Edwards, supra, were materially different from those in the case now under consideration; and we see no reason to recede from the doctrine therein announced.
For the other reasons therein stated by his Honor, Judge Moore, his able decree is affirmed.
MESSRS. JUSTICES FRASER, COTHRAN, and MARION concur
MR. JUSTICE WATTS did not sit.
MR. JUSTICE COTHRAN: I concur in affirming the circuit decree for the reasons therein stated, and am of the opinion that the cases of Lemmon v. McElroy, 113 S.C. 537;101 S.E., 852, and Bartell v. Edwards, 113 S.C. 217,102 S.E., 210, which upon the point decided herein are out of line with the weight of authority in this state and elsewhere, should be distinctly overruled.