Still v. Hampton & Branchville Railroad
Still v. Hampton & Branchville Railroad
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is from an order of the circuit court overruling a demurrer to the complaint upon the ground of misjoinder of causes of action.
The plaintiff sustained injuries to his person and property in a collision at a crossing of the tracks of the Hampton and Branchville Railroad over a state highway in Colleton County. He sued the South Carolina State Highway Department and the railroad company as joint tort-feasors. The complaint specified numerous acts and omissions of each defendant which allegedly combined and concurred to produce an unreasonably hazardous condition on the highway which caused the collision, without contributory fault of plaintiff.
An action against the highway department by any person who suffers injury to his person or property because of a defect in a highway is permitted by Sec
In Hollifield v. Keller, 238 S. C. 584, 121 S. E. (2d) 213, an action was allowed against the City of Columbia and a property owner for injury from a defect in the street allegedly caused by the concurrent negligent acts of both, although greater damages were sought against the property owner than were allowable against the city under the applicable enabling statute, Section 47-70, Code of 1962. The complaint in Hollifield, in form, stated two causes of action, one against each defendant. However the court held that the defendants were charged as joint tort-feasors, and that only one cause of action was stated. Therefore, the city’s demurrer for improper joinder was without merit.
The highway department attempts to distinguish this case from Hollifield upon the sole ground that the plaintiff seeks to recover both actual and punitive damages from the corporate defendant, whereas only actual damages were sought in Hollifield. The issue on this appeal is whether two causes of action are misjoined in the complaint. Therefore, the distinction relied upon is immaterial unless, as is contended, the plaintiff’s claimed right to recover punitive damages against the corporate defendant rests upon a cause of action, separate and distinct from his claim to actual damages. The department cites Hallman v. Cushman, 196 S. C. 402, 13 S. E. (2d) 498, as authority for the proposition that awards of actual and punitive damages are sup
The opinion in Hallman touches upon the point only in the following statement: “It is true that a cause of action for punitive damages and a cause of action for actual damages are logically and technically separate and distinct, although they may be pleaded together under the statute frequently termed the ‘jumbling act,’ Code 1962, Sec. 484.” 13 S. E. (2d) at 500. The quoted excerpt from the opinion was strictly obiter dictum, but it correctly expressed a view of the law which formerly prevailed in this jurisdiction. However, the learned writer of the opinion overlooked Furman v. A. C. Tuxbury Land & Timber Co., 112 S. C. 71, 99 S. E. Ill, in which the issue was squarely involved, and the earlier decisions were overturned by an unanimous court. The opinion by Mr. Justice Hydrick, which is thoroughly buttressed by reason and authority, points out that the error in the former view was “in confusing the cause of action with the nature of the damages which the law imposed upon the defendant as a consequence of its invasion of the plaintiff’s right. * * * (T)he relief alone, and not the cause of action, was determined or affected by the mental attitude of the defendant in doing the wrong.” 99 S. E. at 113.
The Furman decision unequivocally declared the law of this jurisdiction to be that one who is injured by the tortious conduct of another has a single cause of action against the wrongdoer to recover actual damages, if the tort was merely negligent, or to recover both actual and punitive damages, if the tort was willful. This declaration of the law was again overlooked in the dissenting opinion in Allen v. Atlanta & C. Air Line Ry., 216 S. C. 188, 57 S. E. (2d) 249, 23 A. L. R. (2d) 657, where the earlier decisions were referred to as controlling precedents. The majority opinion, while not mentioning Furman, reached a result which was entirely consistent with it. Neither this decision, nor any other which has come to our attention,
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.