The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, a citizen of Union County, was the builder of the Glenn-Lowry Cotton Mill at Whitmire in Newberry County, of which he was for a number of years the president and the owner of a large majority of the stock. In the year 1917, and for some time prior thereto, the mill was in financial distress, and the plaintiff was having difficulty in providing funds with which to operate. Certain of the defendants are members of the brokerage and commission firm of John P. Stevens & Co., of New York Cit)c This firm had represented the Glenn-Lowry Mill as selling agents from about 1910 until 1915, and during that period had advanced the mill large,, sums of money. In 1915, Stevens & Co. declined longer to carry the account as- selling agents, and requested that the indebtedness be reduced to $500,000. An arrangement was made whereby the selling account was transferred to Harding Tilton Company, and the indebtedness of the mill to Stevens & Co., to the amount of $500,-000.00, was assumed by the plaintiff personally, who secured the account by a pledge of stock in the mill. Between 1915 and 1917 this indebtedness of the plaintiff to Stevens & Co. was not reduced. Prior to 1917 the plaintiff had become indebted to the Southern Power Company and to various other creditors in the sum of about_ $200,000.00, which
Early in 1917 the Southern Power Company, holder of a past-due note for $110,000.00, secured by 7 per cent, preferred stock of the par value of $175,000.00, began pressing for payment. Some effort seems to have been made by the defendant, J. P. Stevens, to form a creditors’ committee to take charge of the plaintiff’s affairs and work matters out by operating the mill under the virtual direction of the creditors. The plan was not acceptable to the Southern Power Company, and does not seem to have been favored by the plaintiff. Finally, after negotiations extending over a period of several weeks, on May 2, 1917, at a conference in New York between the plaintiff, one or two other officers of the mill, and the plaintiff’s personal attorney, George S. Mower, Esq., on the one hand, and the defendant, J. P. Stevens and others representing various creditors, on the other side, the plaintiff signed an agreement to relinquish the management of the mill property, and to transfer and convey outright to his creditors the stock pledged to secure his loans and to transfer and deliver to the GlennLowry Manufacturing Company all of his unpledged stock to secure his personal indebtedness to the mill, subject to the condition that he have a right to pay the debts and redeem the stock within six months. For the stock so transferred, the plaintiff was to be fully and finally discharged of all liability on account of said debts. The evidence leaves little room for doubt that, if the obligations of the plaintiff had been foreclosed by a sale of the pledged stock on May 2, 1917, the stock would have brought only a small proportion of the indebtedness and that as a result of such course of action plaintiff would not only have lost his stock, but would have been left with an outstanding personal liability for an unpaid balance in a large amount..
“Based on what you heard in your conversation with them, and the general talk you heard around the mill village, what was the opinion of the mill employees as to who was responsible for that strike.”
The answer was to the effect that the opinion was that Mr. Heard was instrumental in it by reason of the known fact “that he. did not get along with Mr. Long.” The only ground specified for the objection to this testimony was that the witness, Herren, “was not one of the strikers.”
We do not think Heard’s responsibility for, or connection with, the strike could properly be established by reputation or public opinion among the mill employees, and, if offered for that purpose alone, the testimony was clearly inadmissible. See, generally, Brown v. Foster, 41 S. C., 122; 19 S. E., 299. State v. Green, 40 S. C., 328; 18 S. E., 933; 42 Am. St. Rep., 872. Munro v. Long, 35 S. C., 360; 14 S. E., 824; 28 Am. St. Rep., 851. Rogers v. Railway Co., 31 S. C., 388; 9 S. E., 1059. But it was not inadmissible upon the ground called to the attention of the trial Judge. Obviously, whether Herren was one of the strikers or not did not affect the essential character of the testimony or render it the more or less competent as judicial proof of Heard’s responsibility for the strike. But the testimony was apparently admitted by the Circuit Judge, not as competent evidence of Heard’s connection with the strike, but merely as proof of the independent fact
Appellant’s second point (Exception 2), imputes error to the trial Judge in charging one of defendant’s requests as follows: “Deceit or fraudulent representation, in order to be actionable, must relate to existing or past facts, and the fact that a promise made in the course of negotiations is never performed does not in and of itself constitute nor evidence fraud. A mere breach of a contract does not constitute fraud.”
It is contended that, in giving this instruction, the Circuit Judge “told the jury as to what was evidence of fraud and what was not evidence of fraud,” and thereby charged on the facts. The charge embodied the well-established general proposition of law (26 C. J., 1087; Holmes v. Caldwell, 10 Rich., 311; Caldwell v. Duncan, 87 S. C., 331; 69 S. E., 660), that fraud cannot be predicated upon an unfulfilled promise as to future events alone.
“The mere violation of a contract will not support an allegation of fraud.” Caldwell v. Duncan, 87 S. C., 339; 69 S. E., 663.
It was doubtless in recognition of that principle that plaintiff did not rest his cause of action upon the mere breach of the alleged promise to extend the option. If the breach of that promise did not of itself constitute fraud, such breach was not of itself evidence of fraud. The plaintiff’s contention that such breach was in itself evidence of fraud, when considered in connection with other facts and circumstances tending to establish a conspiracy, was fully and fairly safeguarded by the following instruction in the general charge:
Page 16“A future promise is not fraudulent, unless such a future promise was part of a general design or plan existing at the time, made as part of a general scheme £o induce the signing of a paper or to make one act, as he otherwise would not have acted, to his injury.”
Again, in response to an inquiry from the jury, the Judge very'favorably and clearly stated and illustrated the law applicable to the facts frorn plaintiff’s standpoint. Even in the possible view that the charge complained of, standing alone, might have been misleading, we think the plaintiff received the full benefit of all that he was entitled to by way of qualification of the instruction to which exception is taken. So considered, the charge clearly is not open to valid criticism, and the exception must be overruled.
The appellant’s third point (Exceptions 3 and 4), is directed to the contention that the trial Judge exerted such undue and improper pressure on the jury as- to coerce a verdict. The trial of the case appears to have consumed about a week. The j ury remained out all of one night. The next morning they were brought in by order of the Court and the foreman reported that they were “hopelessly at odds,” but expressed no desire on the part of the jury to be discharged. Thereupon the Judge'addressed to the jury certain general remarks as to their official duty in making a conscientious effort to arrive at the truth and find a verdict, and advised them that, in view of the “seriousness of the case, the time lost, and the interest involved” he did not feel that he would be justified in excusing them until they had made further effort. It was in the course of these remarks that the Judge used the language complained of, which is as follows:
(1) “I know this jury measures up in intelligence with any you can get to pass on this case. If you can’t decide it, who can you hope to get to decide it? Without meaning any reflection on you at all, the fact that you fail to do this work is just as analogous to a situation in time of war,
(2) “Is "it possible that the truth is so elusive that twelve men, after deliberating, can’t find what the truth is? If that were true we will have practically lapsed back into the ages where we came from.”
Perhaps the analogy between the duty of a jury as to reaching a verdict and that of a regiment in time of war called upon to perform a service, is not so close as to make it an altogether happy illustration for general use in admonishing juries. But the foregoing portions of Judge Mclver’s address constituted only a small part of what was on the whole an admirably impartial, appropriate, and courteous appeal to the jury to make every reasonable effort faithfully to discharge the duty imposed upon them. There was- no- suggestion of a threat as to keeping the jury together for a definite or indefinite time; no suggestion of an order o.r command that they must agree; no emphasis upon or reference to any phase of the facts in issue; no exhortation that did not redound as fully to the benefit of the plaintiff as of the defendants; no objections as to the alleged coercive nature of the Judge’s remarks was interposed at the trial; and, in the light of long experience as a trial lawyer, the writer hazards the surmise that this appeal of the courtly Mclver was not unfavorably regarded by plaintiff’s counsel at the time of its. deliverance. Following these remarks, at the request of the foreman and of plaintiff’s counsel Judge Mclver again charged the jury as to certain points of law. To this charge the plaintiff takes no exception. The Judge’s appeal can be construed as nothing more nor less than strong moral suasion to do the right. The substance of appellant’s criticism is that it was too strong. We are not prepared to approve the general proposition that pure moral suasion to discharge an important duty in a righteous way may be so strong
For the reasons stated, the exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.