Tittle v. Kennedy
Tittle v. Kennedy
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff in this action of claim and delivery recovered the following verdict: “We find for the plaintiff the oats described in the complaint, or their value, which we fix at one hundred and nineteen dollars and forty cents, and also actual and punitive damages fifty dollars.
The verdict, as appears by its terms, was responsive to the following instruction of the Circuit Judge, which was given *3 after stating the law on the subject of actual damages: “And in addition, under the laws of this State, if one takes or wrongfully withholds the property from' another, and there are such circumstances or facts that would render the defendant liable to punitive or vindictive damages, then the owner of the property would have the right, not only to recover the value of the property, but the damages also, if the party acted in a wilful or malicious manner — wanton or a malicious disregard of the rights of the owner of the property; and that is what the plaintiff sues for here.”
The decision as to the construction of our statutes on the subject might be safely rested here but for an apparent variance between the provisions of sections 283 and 299 of the Code of Procedure, which we have .italicized below:
“Sec. 283. In an action for the recovery of specific personal property, if the property have not been delivered to the plaintiff, or if it have,' and the defendant, by his answer, claim a return thereof, the jury shall assess the value of the property, if their verdict be in favor of the plaintiff, or if they find in favor of the defendant, and that he is enittled to a return thereof; and may at the same time assess the damages, if any are claimed in the complaint or answer, which the prevailing party has sustained by reason of the detention or taking and withholding such property. * * *”
“Sec. 299. In an action to recover the possession of personal property, judgment for the plaintiff may be for the possession,"or for the recovery of possession, or the value thereof, in case a delivery cannot be hád, and of damages for the detention. If the property have been delivered to the plaintiff, and the defendant claim a return thereof, judgment for the defendant may be for a return of the property, or the value thereof, in case a return cannot be had, and damages for taking and withholding the same.”
It will be observed in section 299, the plaintiff is allowed damages not for the taking, but for the detention, while the defendant is allowed damages for the taking and withholding, in case the property has been taken from his possession *6 by the plaintiff in the claim and delivery proceeding. It has been held by the authorities above referred to that damages for detention merely precludes the idea of punitive damages, and, therefore, the plaintiff could not recover such damages under this section. Nor could the defendant recover such damages under section 299, because he is entitled to recover for the taking by an officer of the law- under legal process, and for the withholding' which would also preclude the idea of outrage by the plaintiff himself in the act of taking; and withholding is the same as detention. By a well known rule of construction, for the sake of consistency, the words “detention or taking and withholding,” used in section 283, are to be interpreted and applied as in section 299. To be consistent with section 299, the provision of section 283 as to. damages to the prevailing party, “sustained by reason of the detention or taking and withholding such property,” must be held to mean that when the prevailing party is the plaintiff, the jury must assess- the damages for the detention, but when the prevailing party is the defendant and the property has been taken in the claim, and delivery proceedings, the jury may assess for such .taking and for the withholding. As we have seen, this makes the two sections consistent, and precludes the recovery of punitive damages by either party.
Thé act of 1898, Code of Procedure, sec. 186a, does not affect the question, for it relates entirely to- pleading and procedure — allowing different good causes of action to be jumbled together — and does not purport to enlarge the scope of the special action of claim and delivery, or to create any new kind of damages; therefore, although claim and delivery is an ex delicto action, yet being one in which punitive damages could not be recovered, the act of 1898 did not change the rule and allow recovery for such damages.
We conclude the Circuit Judge was in error in charging that punitive damages are recoverable in an action of claim and delivery.
*7
It is not necessary to' consider the motion made to require what the defendant insists were two causes of action to be stated separately, because it follows from1 the' conclusion' that punitive damages are not recoverable in an action' of this character that the allegations relating thereto1 should have been stricken out. The case is clearly distinguished on this- question of practice from Berry v. Moore, 69 S. C., 317. There the claim for punitive damages was stated as a separate and distinct cause of action, and demurrer to that cause of action was held to1 be the proper remedy; here the allegations as to punitive damages are stated not as a separate cause of action, but along with the ordinary allegations in claim and delivery. “A demurrer is not generally a' proper remedy for disposing of irrelevant or redundant matter contained in a pleading, but an application to1 strike out is the only proper remedy, since a demurrer does not lie to1 a part only of the allegations intended to set forth a single cause of action or defense; nor is irrelevancy, redundancy or surplusage a ground of demurrer to the pleading as a whole. On the other hand, where an entire pleading, or part of a pleading, purporting to set up a separate cause of action or, defaise, is wholly devoid of merit, and consists only of *8 irrelevant or superfluous matter, a general demurrer will lie, or the objection may be taken in some other manner proper for determining its sufficiency; but according to many authorities it may not be stricken out under a Code provision the language of which limits motions to- strike out to irrelevant or redundant matter contained or inserted in a pleading which is otherwise good.” 21 Ency. P. & P., 234-236. The motion to strike out should have been granted.
Cogent practical objections could be urged to the application of any one of these rules, and if the matter were open in this State, the whole subject would require much consideration ; but the rule applicable to the facts of this case has been laid down in Hancock v. Caskey, 8 S. C., 282. It is there held that the purchaser of land at private sale takes the growing crops, unless they are reserved in the sale, and, therefore, that a party to a judicial proceeding instituted for the purpose of procuring a sale or partition cannot, as against the purchaser, have the crop planted by him growing on the land at the time of the sale, unless it was reserved. In this case, the lis pendens having been filed before the land was rented or the crop planted, the defendant, in renting it and planting his crop, stood in the same relation to the property and took the same risks as if he had been a party to the action. There was, therefore, no error in the charge of the Circuit Judge on this subject.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause be remanded for a new trial.
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- 1. Claim and Delivery. — Punitive Damages are not recoverable in an action in claim and delivery. Code of Proc., secs. 283, 299, construed, and sec. 186a held not to change the rule as to damages in actions in claim and delivery. 2. Demurrer — Pleadings.—Motion to Strike Out and not demurrer is the proper remedy to get rid of irrelevant allegations commingled with allegations proper to state a cause of action. Berry v. Moore, 69 S. C., 317, distinguished from this case. 3. Landlord and Tenant — Mortgages.—Á Renter of mortgaged lands after foreclosure commenced and lis pendens filed, is not entitled to crop planted by him and standing on land on day of sale, but they go to the purchaser.