37 Ga. 335 | Ga. | 1867
The error assigned to the judgment of the Court below in this case, is the refusal of the Court to grant a new trial, upon the grounds specified in the record. The interrogatories of Harris had been returned to the clerk’s office of the Court in which the suit was pending, and had remained there for some months, and then were taken out by one of the plaintiffs’ counsel, and remained in his possession until the trial. When the cause was about to be submitted to the jury, exceptions were taken to the interrogatories upon the grounds that there was but one commissioner named in the commission, the commission being directed to “N. E. Wilson, Commissioner for the State of Georgia, in Louisville, Kentucky, Esquires.” The deposition of the witness was taken by said commissioner, sworn to, and duly certified by him as such commissioner. The exceptions to the interrogatories were not made in writing, as required by section 3835 of the Eevised Code. The counsel for the defendant asked for time to reduce his exceptions to writing, which the Court declined to give, overruling the exceptions, and admitted the interrogatories to be read in evidenee. We are reluctant to interfere with the discretion of the Circuit Courts, in mere matters of practice, unless the legal rights of parties are prejudiced thereby. According to strict rule, the exceptions to the interrogatories ought to have been in writing; the indulgence asked for to put them in writing, was more a matter of favor than a matter of right; but we are inclined to the opinion that the exceptions to the interrogatories ought to have been overruled, had the same been reduced to writing. By section 62 of the Eevised Code, the Governor of this State is authorized to appoint commissioners in other States and Territories of the United States, to “take and certify depositions under commissions, or otherwise.” Commissioners shall issue generally in blank. Eevised Code, 3826.
A commissioner, like a Judge, should stand perfectly impartial between the parties. Code 3827. The answers of the witness must be under oath, and certified to be so taken.
The Court below charged the jury in this case, “ that if they should find for the plaintiff, they might find for the highest price of cotton proven, or any other proven value, to which they should add interest on the sum from the time of the conversion, and return their verdict for the aggregate amount.” The exception to the charge of the Court is in relation to interest, upon the facts of the case. The conversion of the cotton by the defendants, was in making sale of it to Harris, who purchased it from them, at twirty-two and one-half cents per pound. The highest price for which cotton sold, was proved to have been forty-five cents per pound. In Schley vs. Lyon & Rutherford (6th Ga. R., 535) this Court held that the general rule in actions of trover is, that the measure of damages will be the value of the property at the time of conversion, with the interest thereon from that time. Since that decision was made, the legislature have adopted a
For damages arising from breach of contracts, legal interest is allowed thereon. By section 2494 of the Revised Code, it is declared that “ In all cases where an amount ascertained, would be the damages at the time of the breach, it may be increased by the addition of legal interest from that time, till the recovery.” This shows that when the legislature intended that interest should be allowed on verdicts for damages, it is expressly so declared in the Code. It is so expressly declared in section 2497, when there has been a breach upon a covenant of warranty of title to land. In estimating the value of the cotton converted by the defendants in this case, the rule of damages as prescribed by the Code, is that stated by the Court to the jury, without the addition of interest. As the plaintiff was not entitled to interest as part of his damages in this case, the judgment of the Court below will be reversed unless the plaintiff shall write off from the verdict, the amount of the interest specified in the judgment of this Court, in the remittitur to the Court below; in the event of his doing so, then the judgment of the Court below will stand affirmed.
Let the judgment be entered to that effect on the minutes of the Court.