Opinion
9343
March 18, 1916.
Before WILSON, J., Columbia, April, 1915. Affirmed.
Actions by B.R. Castles and by John H. Taylor against the South Carolina Law Collection Agency and E.E. Phillips. From judgment for plaintiffs, and orders for arrest of defendant, Phillips, he appeals.
Messrs. Cooper Cooper, for appellant, cite: As to right to arrest: 38 S.C. 482; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 230; 16 A. E. Enc. of L. 20; 3 Cyc. 904. Execution against person: Code Civ. Proc., sec. 346.
Mr. D.W. Robinson, for respondent, cites: As to special issue as to fraud: 88 S.C. 106, 107; 94 S.C. 428. Arrest and bail and execution against person: Code Civ. Proc., secs. 230 and 346; 82 S.C. 439; 4 Wait's Practice, p. 120, sec. 2.
March 18, 1916. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
These two cases were tried together upon similar pleadings. The actions were brought to recover damages to the plaintiffs for causing the discharge of the respective plaintiffs by sending in to the employer of the plaintiffs an assignment of the wages of each of the plaintiffs. The answer of the defendant was a denial of the allegations of the complaints. The cases were tried before Judge Wilson, and a jury, at the April, 1915, term of the Court for Richland county, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs in each case: In the Castles case, actual damages $650, punitive damages $1, total $651; in the Taylor case, actual damages $600, punitive damages $1, total $601. A motion for a new trial was made and refused. After verdicts were rendered in each case, plaintiffs obtained an order for the arrest of the defendant. From this order, as well as from the judgments in each case, defendant appealed upon three exceptions.
The first exception is as follows:
(1) Because the Court erred in that it did not submit to the jury as a matter of fact the question of whether or not there was fraud.
This exception is overruled, as the Court simply carried out the provisions of section 321 of Code of Civil Procedure, and appellant did not request the Court for a special verdict which was his duty to do if he desired it. Manson v. Dempsey, 88 S.C. 193, 70 S.E. 610; Ellison v. Railway, 94 S.C. 428, 77 S.E. 723, 78 S.E. 231. The jury having found a verdict responsive to the issues submitted, established the truth of the issues. This exception is overruled.
Exceptions 2 and 3 are as follows:
(2) Because under the verdict found by the jury his Honor, the presiding Judge, had no right to issue an order for execution against the person.
(3) Because the Court erred in singing an order for execution against the person of the defendant, as the complaint did not state a cause for arrest under section 230 of the Civil Code of Procedure, or section 346 of the Civil Code of Procedure.
The order of the Court simply provides that execution shall issue against the person of the defendant, if the execution against his property was returned unsatisfied. The cause of action set forth in the pleadings and verdict rendered in the case warranted the order of the Court under section 346, Code of Civil Procedure, and the case of Martin v. Hutto, 82 S.C. 439, 64 S.E. 421. The Judge, who tried the case and heard the evidence, was in a frame of mind, by his knowledge of the facts of the case and the finding of the jury, to make the necessary order in the case to give the plaintiffs the fruit of their litigation. The order made was within the terms "ordinary proceedings in the action." The Court had the right to grant the order it made at the time of the rendition of the judgment. Odom v. Burch, 52 S.C. 309, 29 S.E. 726. All exceptions are overruled.
Judgment affirmed.