21 Ga. App. 81 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
This case arose as a suit on account in a justice’s court, the articles alleged to have been sold by the plaintiff, Drake, to the railroad company being two lots of cross-ties, one on December 15, 1913, the other on March 30, 1914, at prices therein stated. The defendant denied that it was indebted to the plaintiff in any amount or manner. Dpon the trial in the justice’s court the magistrate rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, for the full amount claimed. The defendant thereupon appealed to a jury in the superior court, where upon the trial a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for the same amount. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was thereafter overruled, and it brings a writ of error to this court.
The evidence in the case is very brief. J. W. Drake, the plaintiff, testified that he was in the tie business, and had a camp at' Donalsonville, on or near the company’s right of way; that the company’s inspector, Giles, inspected the ties, accepted some of them (about which there is no controversy), and rejected 483 of them; “that he was not present except for a few minutes on one occasion in December when the tie train was loading these ties; that the last time he saw the cull ties they were scattered among a large pile of good ties, and that about three of four days after the tie train had been there to remove the ties ... he found the cull ties to have, been removed by some one. He later walked down the Coast Line Eoad between Donalsonville and Iron City and discovered in one place one cull tie, in another place three cull ties, and in another place five cull ties, in a distance of a little more than a mile. He did not know where these cull ties came from. The cull ties were worth 30 cents each.” E. A.Drake testified,“that there was a large quantity of cull ties among the good ones, and. that they, later, after the train had been there, had been removed by some one, he did not know how or by whom.” One Alday testified that he was with the plaintiff on the occasion of the walk down the railroad, and “that he saw eight or ten cull ties' in various
1. The plaintiff’s proceeding in the justice’s court follows the forms usual in suits on account. It contains nothing to indicate that it is based upon an implied, rather than an express, contract. The plaintiff’s evidence, however, seeks only to establish an implied contract, a right to recover on a quantum valebant. But this apparent variance does not in fact constitute a legal or material variance between the allegations and the proof. Civil Code (1910), §§ 5513, 5572, 5573. This is especially true as applied to pleadings in a justice’s court, because there the same degree of particularity is not required as in those courts where suits are commenced by petition. Davis v. Bibb County, 116 Ga. 23 (2) (42 S. E. 403). Even in the superior court, where, in a petition, the plaintiff is required to set forth his cause of action plainly, fully, and distinctly (Civil Code, § 5538), and where an allegation of a promise to pay might with a greater degree of reason be said to import an express promise, the allegations may be established by
2. The controlling question in this case is whether or not the evidence, as a whole, authorizes the conculsion that the defendant company accepted the ties in question and thereby impliedly promised to pay the reasonable value thereof. Civil Code (1910), § 5513. To put .it- more pointedly still, the controlling question is: Did the company remove the ties ? To prove that it did, the plaintiff relies wholly upon circumstantial evidence. In Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Pitts, 16 Ga. App. 314 (85 S. E. 285), which is a somewhat similar case, this court held: .“Though the placing of cross-ties at a switch on the line of a railway company for its acceptance and use, and their subsequent removal by some one, might create a presumption that the ties had been accepted and used by the company, and a corresponding obligation on its part to pay therefor, yet where positive, unequivocal, and uncontradicted testimony denies that the ties were evbr inspected or received by the company, this presumption is legally rebutted.” In that ease it does not appear that there was any inspection of the ties by the railway company or any rejection of the seller’s offer, and therein lies the chief distinction between that ease and this. Silence, under the circumstances there indicated, together with the subsequent removal of the ties by some, one, is what raised the prima facie presumption that the railway company had accepted, removed, and used the ties. Such a presumption, arising from such proved facts, does no violence to any one, imputes no wrongful act or intention to any officer or agent of the railway company. But in the case at bar the company was not silent. On the contrary, it caused the ties offered by Drake to be duly inspected, expressly rejected them as unsuited to its needs, and so notified him, leaving the ties where it had found them, and they were thereafter removed by some one. When, how, or by whom they were removed does not appear; nor does it appear that the company’s requirements underwent any change. These facts do not create any such presumption. Standing alone, they do not create any presumption in favor of the plaintiff or against the defendant. In other words, since there is no evidence to show when, how, or by whom the ties were remqved, and nothing to show any reconsideration by the company of the plaintiff’s offer, the bare
3. The plaintiff contends, however, that, coupled with the fact of the unexplained removal of his ties by some one, is the further fact that similar ties were susequently discovered along the company’s right of way, and that the two circumstances together, create the presumption that the company accepted and removed the particular ties which it had theretofore rejected. But the ties that were so discovered are not identified as any part of the lot in question, nor does it even appear whether they were so placed before or after the unexplained removal of the rejected ties. This further circumstance is therefore wholly without evidentiary value. As held by this court in the case of Ga. Ry. & El. Co. v. Harris, 1 Ga. App. 714 (57 S. E. 1076), “Where a plaintiff in a civil ease supports his action solely by circumstantial evidence, before he is authorized to have a verdict in his favor the testimony must be such as to reasonably establish the theory relied upon, and to preponderate to that theory rather than to any other reasonable hypothesis.” Again, under the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Central Railroad &c. Co. v. Dottenheim, 92 Ga. 425 (17 S. E. 662), it is to be presumed that the trial court would have excluded the testimony as to the discovery of similar ties along the company’s right of way had a proper and timely motion to that end been made. .Though admitted without objection, such evidence is without probative value, because it is not sufficiently connected with the particular matter in controversy here.
4. The fourth headnote needs no elaboration. It is merely the application of a well settled rule of law to the facts of this case, or rather to what would have been the facts of this case had the
5. The plaintiff' was not, under any view of the evidence, entitled to a verdict in his favor. The trial court, therefore, erred in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed,