117 Ga. 124 | Ga. | 1903
Tbe Atlanta Standard Telephone Company sued T. H.. Porter, in a justice’s court in Fulton county, upon an account, for $16.80, for telephone service. In the justice’s court the case was-appealed to a jury, and there was a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff presented a petition for certiorari to the judge of the superior court of the Atlanta circuit, who refused to sanction the same; whereupon the plaintiff sued out a bill of exceptions,alleging error in this ruling of the judge. From the evidence for the defendant, as set forth in the petition for certiorari, it appears that the defense set up was failure of consideration. It also appears that the plaintiff introduced a witness who swore that the account, sued on was just, due, and unpaid ; and a written contract between the parties,.wherein the defendant agreed to pay to the plaintiff, “as an annual rental for exchange service charges, the sum of $36.00, payable in quarterly installments in advance for a period of five years.” This contract contained the following provision: “If the service is interrupted otherwise than by negligence or willful interference of the subscriber, a rebate at the rate hereinbefore specified shall be made for the time such interruption continues.
We think his honor erred in the construction which he placed upon the contract. It will be seen that, under the contract, the defendant was bound to pay to the plaintiff, for telephone service to be furnished to him by the latter, $36 annually, in quarterly installments, payable in advance of service rendered by the company, and, if the service should be “interrupted otherwise than by the'negligence or willful interference” of the defendant, the plaintiff was bound to “ rebate,” or refund, the “ rental ” for the time during which such interruption continued, after written notice thereof to the telephone company, but “ no other liability should in any case attach to the company:’ So, if the contract were carried out on the part of the defendant, the “rental” for the telephone service which the company contracted to furnish him would, at the beginning of each quarter, be paid in advance of the rendition of such service, subject
Judgment reversed.