January 18, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Action to recover several small parcels of land adjacent to the main tracks of the defendant Southern Railway, Carolina Division, in the city of Rock Hill, S.C. and for damages on account of alleged "wrongful taking and trespassing thereon." The exceptions will be reported.
The proprietary rights of the plaintiff, for the alleged invasion of which a remedy was sought in this action, were those acquired by virtue of a deed of conveyance from Thos. F. McDow, as trustee in bankruptcy of A.E. Hutchison, to W.B. Wilson, plaintiff's testate, executed in the year of 1901, pursuant to a sale at public auction of all the right, title, and interest of the said A.E. Hutchison, bankrupt, in certain real estate. The land in dispute was a part of lot A covered by said trustee's deed. Responsive to allegations of his complaint the original party plaintiff testified, in substance, that, at the time of the sale at which he purchased *Page 404 in 1901, there were three or four side tracks of the railway company running over lot A, and that there were then located thereon a coal chute, oil tank, an old box car, a storage bin, and a building in one corner; that he entered into possession of said lot A, claiming everything except the part of it occupied by the tracks and at various times had portions of the lot plowed up, and also erected a fence, but that nothing he did interfered with the use by the railroad of its sidetracks or of its yard and main track; that he stopped the digging by the railroad of a well on the land in 1906, objected to and prevented the laying of a side track in 1911, and objected to and unsuccessfully endeavored to prevent the laying of a side track thereon in 1917 or 1918, following which this action was brought.
The defendant alleged, and adduced evidence tending to establish that in 1888 E.A. Hutchison was the owner in fee of said lot A; that in that year the defendants' predecessor in interest, the Charleston, Cincinnati Chicago Railroad Company, constructed its line of railway through the city of Rock Hill, and acquired from the said A.E. Hutchison, as it had the right under its charter to do, the right of way for the laying of its tracks an easement for the maintenance of its yard and for the construction of its depot, shop, and other necessary structures for railway purposes, upon the whole of lot A; that the said A.E. Hutchison by verbal agreement granted the said easement in consideration of the construction by the railroad company of industrial side tracks to a cotton mill of which Mr. Hutchison was then president, and in which he was a large stockholder; that the conditions of said agreement were fully performed on the part of both Hutchison and the railroad; and that the said lot, including the parcels claimed by the plaintiff, had ever since the year 1888 been in the open, notorious, and continuous possession and use of the defendants and of their predecessors in interest to the extent they were legally entitled to assert such possession *Page 405 and use by virtue of their easement for necessary railroad purposes.
Evidence bearing upon the value of the land in controversy was introduced by both parties. It appeared that the price paid by the plaintiff for whatever rights he acquired in the land in the year 1901 was about $200, and that in about 1906 the plaintiff sold to a warehouse company his interest in and to one-half of the land for $250 or $300. The jury were sent to Rock Hill to view the premises. Upon the issues joined the cause was tried in the Court of Common Pleas before Judge Sease and a jury at York, December, 1919. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for "$1,500 compensation." The plaintiff moved for a new trial on the minutes of the Court upon grounds which will be hereafter set out.
While the case does not disclose that an appeal was taken, the party appearing as appellant in this Court was the plaintiff in the Circuit Court, in whose favor a verdict was rendered. Whether judgment was entered upon the verdict does not appear from the record. Since no appeal would lie from the verdict of the jury (Winsmith v.Walker, 5 S.C. 473; Bank v. Gary, 14 S.C. 571); in the absence of judgment thereon, it must be assumed that plaintiff's appeal is from the order of the Circuit Court refusing the motion for a new trial, such order being the only appealable adjudication of the Court below disclosed by the case.
The only exception which imputes error to the trial Court in refusing the motion for a new trial (6 and 7) are very properly predicated upon and confined to the grounds of that motion as made in the Circuit Court.Crawford v. Baltimore Co., 98 S.C. 121; 82 S.E., 273;McClure v. Home Ins. Co., 111 S.C. 463; 98 S.E., 287. Those grounds are:
"(1) That the undisputed evidence tended to prove that title to said lands was vested in the plaintiff"; and "(2) *Page 406 that there was no evidence tending to prove that the value of said lands was only $1,500, while the undisputed evidence tended to prove that the value of said lands was greatly in excess of this small amount."
That this Court has no jurisdiction in a law case "to review orders granting or refusing new trials, when they are based upon and involve the decision of questions of fact, unless it appears that the finding is wholly unsupported by evidence, or the conclusion reached was influenced or controlled by some error of law," is too well settled to require discussion. Miller v. R. Co., 95 S.C. 472;79 S.E., 645; Turner v. Ry. Co. (S.C.), 113; S.E., 360. In the grounds for the motion for new trial no error of law is pointed out or suggested. If the refusal to grant the new trial amounted to error of law in that the verdict sought to be set aside was wholly unsupported by evidence, having made no motion to direct a verdict in accordance with such alleged conclusive force and effect of the evidence, pursuant to rule 77 of the Circuit Court (73 S.E., vii), it would seem clear that plaintiff is not now in position to make that contention. Pendarvis v. Asbestos, etc., Co., 101 S.C. 347;85 S.E., 773; Du Pre v. Railway, 96 S.C. 346;80 S.E., 710; Baker v. Tel. Co., 84 S.C. 477;66 S.E., 182; 137 Am. St. Rep., 848. Waiving that objection, however, we have carefully examined the evidence set out in the record, and are clearly of the opinion that there was ample evidentiary foundation for the verdict of the jury. See Huggins v. A.C.L.R. Co., 96 S.C. 267;79 S.E., 406; Yarborough v. Columbia, etc., Co., 100 S.C. 33;84 S.E., 308.
The remaining exceptions are directed to the assignment of alleged errors in the admission of testimony and in the Judge's charge to the jury. The appellant's position in this Court, in that the objective of her appeal is to set aside a verdict in her own favor, is a somewhat anomalous one. By the terms of our Statute law *Page 407 (Section 376, Code Civ. Proc. 1912), the right of appeal is accorded only to a "party aggrieved."
"Although there are exceptional cases, the general rule is that a plaintiff or defendant cannot appeal or prosecute a writ of error from or to a judgment, order, or decree in his own favor, since he is not aggrieved thereby," etc., 3 C.J., p. 635, § 495.
See Brock v. Kirkpatrick, 72 S.C. 491; 52 S.E., 592.
If it be conceded that an exceptional case is presented where a finding or verdict is favorable in form to a party, but does not give him all he is entitled to, or is otherwise prejudicial to his legal rights, the aggrieved party should present that question to the trial Court in the first instance, and the appeal should be taken from the refusal to set aside or correct the verdict. See Gunter v. Fallow,78 S.C. 457; 59 S.E., 70. Since the only exceptions which assign error in the refusal to set aside the verdict and to grant a new trial, upon the grounds urged in the Circuit Court, have been passed upon, the appellant is not entitled as a matter of right, certainly, in the absence of an appeal from a judgment upon the verdict, to have the other exceptions noted considered by this Court. We have nevertheless carefully examined these exceptions in an effort fairly to appraise the merits of appellant's position.
The plaintiff's cause of action was predicated upon the theory that plaintiff's deed from the trustee of A.E. Hutchison, bankrupt, in 1901 gave him the legal title to the premises in question, and that the appropriation by the defendants of any part of lot A not already occupied for railroad purposes in 1901 was an unlawful trespass upon or taking of plaintiff's property. The plaintiff himself testified that the alleged encroachments of the railroad company amounted in taking "practical possession of the property" and rendered the "remaining property of no value." The Circuit Judge charged that, to the extent the property had been unlawfully encroached upon and appropriated, the *Page 408 plaintiff was entitled to full compensation, and also to punitive damages, "if the railroad took it in a willful and wanton manner," but that plaintiff was not entitled to a recovery of the land so taken under the principle recognized and applied by this Court in Cayce v. So. Ry. Co., 111 S.C. 115,123; 96 S.E., 725. To that portion of the Judge's charge so announcing and applying the legal measure of defendant's liability, there was no exception taken either upon the motion for a new trial in the Court below or upon the appeal to this Court. Indeed, the case seems to have been tried by both parties without objection upon the theory that the whole of the land claimed by the plaintiff had been appropriated by defendants for railroad purposes, and that, if such appropriation was in excess of the rights acquired by the railroad under the original entry, the plaintiff was entitled to an award of permanent damages. The appellant's exceptions must therefore be considered in the light of the general rule that the theory pursued in the trial Court with respect "to the relief sought and grounds therefor" must be adhered to in the appellate Court. 3 C.J., pp. 730, 737, §§ 625, 630.
The exceptions most earnestly urged by appellant (1 and 9) relate to the admission over objection of the testimony of W.C. and David Hutchison, witnesses for the defendants, as to declarations of their father, A.E. Hutchison, with reference to the character and extent of the easement by him verbally granted to the railroad at or prior to the time of the original entry for railroad purposes in 1888. These declarations were statements made by A.E. Hutchison a few months after the railroad was constructed on lot A, and prior to the sale in the summer of 1901 (when the plaintiff acquired such right and title as A.E. Hutchison then held), to the effect that he, the said A.E. Hutchison, had given the railroad the right to use the whole of lot A for railroad purposes in consideration of the construction by the railroad of a certain industrial side track. It is contended that this testimony was inadmissible *Page 409 for the reason that A.E. Hutchison had parted with the possession of lot A at the time he made the alleged declarations. At the time of the said declarations A.E. Hutchison was the owner in fee, and as such entitled to possession as was the plaintiff when he acquired Hutchison's title in 1901. It is somewhat difficult to perceive how the plaintiff, as the grantee of Hutchison's title, could assert a right to possession which was not in Hutchison, from whom he derived. Regardless of that respect of the situation, however, the testimony was clearly admissible under the general principle that "the statements of a grantor of realty, made while title was by hypothesis still in him, are receivable as admissions against any grantee claiming under him." Wigmore on Evidence, §§ 1082, 1457, 1458. The declaration was an admission against proprietary interest, conceding and acknowledging that the owner's title was subject to and burdened with an easement granted. As such it was admissible under the principle above stated, and also in reply to testimony introduced by plaintiff as to other declarations of A.E. Hutchison tending to show character of his holding or possession. Levi v. Gardner, 53 S.C. 31;30 S.E., 617; Ellen v. Ellen, 16 S.C. 135; Metz v. Metz,48 S.C. 486; 26 S.E., 787.
Exceptions 2, 3, 4, and 5 assign error in submitting to the jury the question of whether the defendants had acquired a title, legal or equitable, by adverse possession or otherwise, in the lands in dispute. An examination of the charge fails to disclose any adequate basis for these assignments of error as to the improper submission of issues of title. The one issue made by the evidence clearly submitted by the trial Court to the jury was as to the extent of the defendants' easement for railroad purposes in this land, to which the plaintiff asserted unencumbered title as owner of the fee. Upon this issue the jury found for the plaintiff that the land, or certainly a portion of it, was not burdened with the easement claimed by the defendants. Appellant has wholly failed to point out any *Page 410 casual connection between these alleged errors and the unsatisfactory verdict of the jury complained of.
What has just been said is equally applicable to appellant's eighth exception, assigning error in the charge of the Judge to the effect that, if they took it all for railroad purposes, Mr. Hutchison was there and looking on, and the presumption is that they did take it all," and that "they paid for it or that it was by the consent of Mr. Hutchison." The fact that the railroad entered and constructed its line upon lot A with the consent of Mr. Hutchison in 1888 was not disputed. Plaintiff expressly disclaimed any right to disturb the occupation of the railroad to the extent of its original entry and actual possession. He further testified that "Capt. A.E. Hutchison's home was about 200 yards east of lot A." The defendants' contention was they had taken and had been in possession of the whole of lot A — that is, holding and using it to the extent found reasonably necessary for railroad purposes — for a period of more than thirty years. In the light of the defendants' contention and of the undisputed facts as to the original permissive entry and occupation, during the ownership and control of the property by Capt. Hutchison, in the year 1888, some thirty years before the commencement of the action, there was no error in instructing the jury that the presumption indicated might be indulged, especially when predicated, as stipulated by the Judge, upon the condition, "if they took it all for railroad purposes." See, generally, Riddlehoover v. Kinard, 1 Hill Eq., 376; McLeodv. Rogers, 2 Rich., 19; Powers v. Smith, 80 S.C. 110;61 S.E., 222; Lewis v. Pope, 86 S.C. 295; 68 S.E., 680;Harman v. Ry. Co., 72 S.C. 228; 51 S.E., 689.
In any view, since the jury found adversely to the defendants' contention as to the rights acquired by the railroad under the original entry, the charge could not have been prejudicial to the plaintiff.
The exceptions are overruled, and the order refusing the motion for a new trial is affirmed. *Page 411