v.
State.
Lead Opinion
[*303] The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court, overruling a demurrer to the complaint for insufficiency. On August 10, 1910, the board of directors of the State penitentiary, by authority of law, entered into a contract with plaintiff, whereby they.agreed to furnish him, for the purpose of conducting a hosiery mill within the walls of the penitentiary, the labor of from 200 to 350 convicts of a specified class, at a stipulated rate of hire, for a term of five years, beginning February 1, 1911. They agreed, also, to furnish the building, which had been erected and equipped for that purpose, and to supply it with steam heat and water, and keep it in repair, and to care for and maintain and guard and control the convicts, so that plaintiff was not responsible for the sanitary conditions incident to the operation of the mill. The mill was then in operation, and had been for some years before; and the operation thereof was continued, under the contract, until November 1, 1913, when it was discontinued on account of an act of the legislature, by which the contract, which was specifically referred to in the act, was abrogated from that date. Act March 1, 1913 (28 St. at Targe, p. 210). The act declared that the mill was injurious to the health of the convicts employed therein, detrimental to the public health, and a public nuisance, and prohibited the employment of convicts therein, after the date mentioned. At the session of 1916 another act was passed [Act February 18, 1916 (29 St. at Targe, p. 1196)], which authorized plaintiff to bring an action against the State “for the recovery of such damages, if any as he may have suffered by the abrogation of his contract,” and, under it, this action was brought to recover the damages alleged in the complaint. The defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
[*304] “In that: (1) The provisions of the law relating to the care and employment of convicts are embraced within the police power of the State; (2) that the contract in question was made subject to the right of the State to exercise such police power and to change ^ its policy with regard to its penal system and the employment of its convicts; and (3) that the obligation of such contract is not impaired by the exercise of such powers, and plaintiff has sustained no injury in consequence of the act abolishing the said hosiery mill.”
The motion was refused, and the State appealed.
[*305]
“The principles of law governing his right to a recovery in said action to be such as would govern the case if the action were against a corporation organized under the laws of the State of South Carolina.”
If that does not waive the defense that the contract was annulled in the rightful exercise of sovereign power, it means nothing, for certainly a private corporation could not defend a breach of its contract upon the ground stated.
The conclusion is inevitable that the legislature intended to waive that defense, and give the plaintiff the right to sue the State to have it determine by the judgment of a Court of [*306] competent jurisdiction, according to the rules of law which would be applicable, if the action were between the plaintiff and a private corporation, what damages, if any, the plaintiff sustained by the annulment of his contract. The words “if any” refer to damages, and not to liability.
Order affirmed.
Dissent
Dissenting opinion by
I cannot concur in the opinion of Mr. Justice Hydrick. This is an action for loss of profits. It seems to me that the act under which this action is brought provides for three things : (1) It removes the State’s immunity from suit; (2) it states the measure of the State’s liability, to wit, the liability of a private corporation; (3) the Attorney General shall defend, that is, he shall set up the available defenses.
It seems to me that the words “if any” negative the idea of an admission of liability. If a private corporation would not be liable, then by the terms of the act the State is not. To illustrate, a private corporation has bound itself to sell to another a certain amount of spirituous liquor. Before the elate of the delivery the State forbids the sale and delivery of spirituous liquor. The buyer could not recover his lost profits. The prohibition law is a complete defense. Whatever the legislature in its discretion may do for Mr. Graham is not before us. It seems to me the Attorney General is bound by the act to raise this question, and it should be sustained.