Davis v. Winsmith

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Davis v. Winsmith, 5 S.C. 332 (S.C. 1874)
1874 S.C. LEXIS 43
Moses, Willard, Wright

Davis v. Winsmith

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Wright, A. J.

This was an action brought upon a single bill given for the rental of land. The appellant avers that he did not receive full consideration for said note, as he claims the land rented fell short of the number of acres represented. A part of the land in question was rented at public outcry, there being two fields. The crier represented, as is shown by the testimony, that there were about forty acres in the first field put up for rent, and thirty acres in the second. The two fields rented for the sum of ninety dollars.

After the public bidding was closed, the owner of the land applied to the appellant to rent the whole. A trade was closed for all, and the note sued upon given for the rent.

*334We do not regard the exception to the charge of the Judge well taken. The whole testimony, on the part of the appellant, applied to the quantity of the land supposed to be bid off by him at the public outcry. That contract was entirely superseded by the new one, which included the whole place. It was rented as a whole, and, so far as the testimony shows, referred to the boundaries which were known to the appellant. He had the opportunity of disclosing all that was said and done which led to the execution of the note, and although having it in his power to show any misrepresentation or fraudulent statements in regard to the contract which resulted in his giving the note, not a single expression was offered in evidence from which any wilful misstatement could be inferred.

The note was not given for the rent of a part of the land, as concluded by the bid at the public outcry of it, but on a new contract for the rent of the whole of it, and in regard to it the evidence did not show any misrepresentation as to the quantity in consideration of which the price stated in the note was agreed upon.

The return of the joint surveyor was clearly incompetent, and the Judge properly refused to allow it. Unless verified on the trial by his examination, subject to cross-examination, the mere introduction of the paper in evidence would have been of no avail, for, unless the boundaries were shown by the surveyor, under oath, to be correct, how could the jury ascertain the number of acres, and without this knowledge they could not conclude whether any deficiency of quantity existed. The practice, founded in reason, has too long prevailed to be lightly set aside. If the appellant desired the presence of the surveyor, it was his duty to have subpenaed him, and'have ascertained, before he announced himself ready for trial, that he could avail himself of his examination, if he desired to introduce the plat. If there was any surprise on the part of the appellant, it was caused by his own neglect in not compelling the presence of the surveyor through the means which the law affords him.

Nor was there any error on the part of the Judge in refusing to allow the appellant the reply in the evidence. The testimony offered by the plaintiff below, in answer to that of the defendant, cannot be considered as that kind of new testimony to which a reply is permitted by the party who is not entitled to the general reply. It was but a circumstance to resist the effect of the evidence which the appellant had offered to sustain his defense. If it was not, *335however, even strictly in reply, the appellant has lost the benefit of availing himself of that objection, because he did not, at the time it was offered, submit his exception. He did not admit the plaintiff’s cause of action in the mode provided by the rule, and, therefore, was not entitled to the reply as there allowed.

We see no ground on which the motion can prevail, and it is therefore dismissed.

Moses, C. J., and Willard, A. J., concurred.

Reference

Status
Published