Connolly v. People's Life Ins. Co. of South Carolina
Decision Date | 09 December 1987 |
Docket Number | No. 1076,1076 |
Citation | 364 S.E.2d 475,294 S.C. 355 |
Parties | John M. CONNOLLY, Respondent, v. PEOPLE'S LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Appellant. . Heard |
Court | South Carolina Court of Appeals |
Clifford F. Gaddy, Jr., of Foster, Gaddy & Foster, Greenville, John Gregg McMaster and Henry Dargan McMaster, of Tompkins, McMaster & Thomas, Columbia, for appellant.
Joseph G. Wright, III, and Ernest C. Trammell, of Wright and Trammell, Anderson, for respondent.
This appeal involves an action based on the South Carolina Unfair Trade Practices Act. The jury found that the appellant People's Life Insurance Company of South Carolina willfully violated the act and awarded the respondent John M. Connolly $75,000 in actual damages. The trial judge trebled the damages and awarded Connolly attorney fees and costs pursuant to the act. The dispositive issue is whether People's Life's conversion of a note and mortgage given by Connolly to another constitutes a violation of the unfair trade practices act. We hold that it does not do so and reverse.
Connolly gave a note and mortgage to Key Life Insurance Company to secure a loan. Key Life was later placed in liquidation. Certain assets and liabilities, among them being Connolly's note and mortgage, were assigned to People's Life by the liquidator, the South Carolina Chief Insurance Commissioner.
A dispute soon arose between Connolly and People's Life regarding the balance owed by Connolly on the note. Connolly claimed that he no longer owed any amount on the note. He demanded the note's return and satisfaction of the mortgage. People's Life relied solely on the Insurance Commissioner, who had possession of Key Life's records, to determine whether Connolly owed anything on the note.
After Connolly on July 17, 1985, made what the Insurance Department determined was the final payment due on the note, the Insurance Department asked People's Life to "mark the note satisfied and cancelled and return [it] to the Insurance Department" so that it could forward the note to Connolly's attorney.
Thereafter, People's Life wrote Connolly's attorney that it understood it was not to receive any "additional money from Mr. Connolly." People's Life, however, also advised him that it "[had] not received [its] settlement from the Insurance Department" and that "[u]pon receipt, [it would] then complete processing on Mr. Connolly's mortgage."
People's Life satisfied the mortgage on October 9, 1985.
In the meantime, an attempt by Connolly to sell the mortgaged premises, a marble company, fell through when Connolly could not deliver a clear title to the property.
Connolly's complaint alleges three causes of action against People's Life: a cause of action based on an alleged violation by People's Life of Sections 29-3-310 and 29-3-320 of the South Carolina Code of Laws (1976) because of its failure to mark the mortgage satisfied within three months after Connolly's final payment on the note; a cause of action based on People's Life alleged conversion of the note and mortgage that occurred when it refused Connolly's demand to return the note and mortgage and to have the mortgage marked satisfied and when it used the note and mortgage as leverage in negotiating a settlement with the Department of Insurance; and a cause of action based on an alleged violation of the unfair trade practices act because of People's Life's unfair and deceptive acts in converting Connolly's note and mortgage.
The jury found in favor of People's Life on the first cause of action and found against it on the second and third causes of action. The jury awarded damages only on the cause of action alleging a violation of the unfair trade practices act.
At trial, People's Life made a motion for directed verdict at the close of Connolly's case and at the close of all the evidence on the cause of action alleging a violation of the unfair trade practices act. Although there is a question concerning whether People's Life met the specificity requirement of Rule 50(a) of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure in making its motions for directed verdict, we are satisfied that, when both motions are considered together and are viewed against the backdrop formed by the complaint's allegations and the arguments made by trial counsel either in support of or in opposition to the motions, the trial judge understood that a basis therefor was that People's Life's conversion of the note and mortgage did not constitute a violation of the unfair trade practices act. See 5A J. MOORE AND J. LUCAS, MOORE'S FEDERAL PRACTICE p 50.04 at 50-41--50-42 (2d ed. 1987) (the requirement that a motion for directed verdict state the specific grounds therefor is not a technical one and is satisfied if the court understands the grounds for the motion); 9 C. WRIGHT & A. MILLER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 2533 at 580-81 (1971) ().
We are satisfied also that the exception that raises this issue on appeal, though somewhat general, is likewise sufficient. See Sandel v. Cousins, 266 S.C. 19, 221 S.E.2d 111 (1975) (...
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