14 Ga. App. 668 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Tlie Atlantic Coast Line Bailroad Company sued out a distress warrant against A. T. Snodgrass & Company for $160, as rent, for the year 1910, for a lot of land and certain improvements thereon, occupied by the defendants’ manufacturing plant, to which a side-track on the rented premises extended from the main track of the plaintiff’s railroad. The defendants admitted the contract, of rental as alleged, but by their counter-affidavit attempted to set up by way of recoupment a claim for damages because of an
The case was tried before the judge of the city court without a jury, and the court rendered a judgment against the plaintiff for $80, being the difference between $160 rent, claimed by the plaintiff, and $240 damages, claimed by the defendants. The plaintiff excepted, assigning error for the following reasons: 1. Because the judgment is contrary to law. 2. Because the judgment is contrary to the evidence. 3. Because the judgment is illegal, in that under the law the court had no authority to render a judgment in favor of the defendants for an amount in excess of the rent admitted to be due. 4. Because the damages claimed by the defendants against the plaintiff were not the proper subject of a plea
Recoupment “is confined to the contract on which plaintiff sues.” Civil Code, § 4351. It “is a right of the «defendant to have a deduction from the amount of the plaintiff’s damages, for the reason that the plaintiff has not complied with the cross-obligations or independent covenants' arising under the same contract.” Civil Code, § 4350. “If the damages of the defendant shall exceed in amount those of the plaintiff, the defendant shall in such cases recover of the plaintiff the amount of such excess.” Civil Code, § 4353; Weaver v. Roberson, 134 Ga. 149 (67 S. E. 662). The contract of rental, on which the distress warrant in this case was based, nowhere obligates the railroad company to place cars, for the use of the defendants, on the side-track leading to the planing mill; and if the defendants suffered damage, as they claimed, by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to furnish cars, the damage did not result from the failure on the part of the plaintiff to comply with its cross-obligations or independent _ covenants arising under the contract; and therefore such damage, if it existed, did not entitle the defendants to recoupment against the plaintiff’s claim for rent. If the railroad company was under any obligation to the defendants relative to the furnishing of cars on the side-track for their use, it was not by virtue of any private contract, but arose under the company’s obligations as a common carrier, which are regulated and defined by a rule of the railroad commission of Georgia. Civil Code, § 2664 et seq. The railroad commission, as this record discloses, seems to have decided that the defendants did not owe the demurrage claimed by the plaintiff, and ordered the plaintiff to proceed in the customary transaction of business with the defendants under the same terms and conditions as prevailed prior to the accruing of the demurrage charges in question.
If the conduct of the plaintiff toward the defendants in failing to furnish cars and place them on the side-track near the defendants’
Judgment reversed.