56 Ga. App. 776 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
In 1929 the Tifton Produce Company brought an action against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Companjr, seeking to recover approximately $600 damages for injury to property alleged to have resulted from unreasonable delay in delivery at destination, the measure, of the damages being the difference between the market price of the car-load of watermelons shipped by the plaintiff from Trenton, Florida, to Buffalo, New York, if the same had reached Buffalo with reasonable dispatch, and the actual value of said melons when they did reach Buffalo, less a reasonable freight charge set forth in said petition. In other words, the plaintiff filed his suit before the payment of the freight on said car of melons. The defendant filed a general demurrer to the petition, which was sustained, and the action in said case was dismissed on the authority of Wilensky v. Central of Georgia Rail
At the March term, 1931, of the superior court the plaintiff again brought its action alleging substantially the same facts as alleged in the original petition, except it was alleged that the freight charges had been, paid before the bringing of the second suit. To this petition the defendant filed a plea of res judicata, alleging that the same case, upon substantially the same facts and the same allegations, had been brought in the superior court of Tift County in 1929, and had been dismissed on general demurrer, and that the judgment on the general demurrer dismissing the cause of action was a final adjudication of the ease. A general demurrer was also filed, asking that the case be dismissed upon the authority of the Wilensky case above mentioned. The court, after considering the petition and the various amendments and the plea of res judicata and the demurrers, passed an order striking the plea of res judicata and overruling the demurrers to the petition as amended. Upon this order overruling the demurrers, the case was carried to the Court of Appeals of Georgia, and is reported in 50 Ga. App. 614 (179 S. E. 125). It was held in that case that the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer, and in paragraph 5 of the decision (the same being a headnote decision) the Court of Appeals held as follows: “Under the authority of Turner v. Camp, 110 Ga. 631 (2) (36 S. E. 76), the judgment striking the defendant’s plea of res judicata can not be considered.” Exceptions pendente lite had been filed, and when the case came on for trial at the December term, 1936, of the superior court of Tift County, a verdict was rendered by the jury in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.' A motion for new trial was overruled on April 10, 1937, and the case now comes to this court on exception to that order.
As stated in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, the original suit was dismissed upon authority of Wilensky v. Central of Ga. Ry. Co., supra, it being there decided: “A shipper, who is both consignor and consignee, can not maintain against a carrier an action ex contractu for the value of goods consigned .to the carrier for shipment and not delivered, when the carrier tenders the goods at destination in a damaged condition but refuses
But if the plaintiff, on demurrer, fails in his first action, from the omission of the performance of a condition precedent when such
In the first special ground of the motion for new trial complaint is made that the court refused a continuance on the ground of surprise, because the defendant was not prepared to meet the allegations made by the amendment. The petition alleged that there were two reasons why said car of melons did not reach Buffalo with reasonable dispatch; one was that the company negligently allowed said car to remain a longer time in the Way cross railroad yards than it should, and the other was that the ear did not proceed in its most direct route on the schedule furnished to petitioner. The amendment on which surprise was claimed was that “after having moved said car [from Way cross] the defendant and the converting carrier failed to carry the same over the most direct route, having moved said car by way of Canadaigan Junction, when and whereas if it had been routed by Newberry Junction it would have reached its destination on the morning of July 2d, in sufficient time to reach the market of July 4th.” We do not think there was any abuse of discretion by the trial judge in overruling this motion to continue. The amendment was but a specification and amplification of the original contention made by the pleading, the original pleading having stated that the car was not moved by the most direct route to its destination.
The ruling on evidence complained of in special grounds 2, 3, 4, and 5 of the motion for a new trial disclosed no reversible error.
Complaint is made that the court charged the jury, with reference to the defendant’s contention, that the law “seems to be that an inherent vice or deterioration is a good defense.” It is contended that the use of the expression “seems to be” tended to minimize to the jury the force and effect of the instruction. It was stated in the brief of plaintiff in error that the very just judge did not intend any such effect. While we do not approve of an instruction that states'to the jury that the law “seems” to be thus and so, we do not think srich a charge in this case was reversible error.
Judgment affirmed.