81 Ga. 221 | Ga. | 1888
On November 19th, 1884, a railway company issued, at Litchfield, Illinois, a bill of lading covering a con
On the 22d of November, this draft (and as may be presumed, with the bill of lading attached,) was presented for acceptance, and acceptance was refused, the drawees noting upon the draft in pencil this memorandum : “This flour was bought on sixty days’ time. Draw and we will accept.” There was no signature to the memorandum. The draft was protested for non-acceptance, and in the protest, as a reason for non-acceptance', were the words : “Goods bought on sixty days’ time.” Three days thereafter, to wit, November 25th, the flour was delivered by the Western & Atlantic Railroad, the terminal member of this shipping line, to J. C. McMillan & Co., the bill of lading being out in the hands of this bank. Some two weeks thereafter, the precise time not stated, J. C. McMillan & Go. executed in Atlanta and sent to the milling company a promissory note for $580.73, dating that note November 19th, 1884, and making it payable to the order of the Planet Milling Company, and appointing as the time of payment sixty days after date. On the 3d of December following, this note, being in the hands of the Planet Milling Company, was discounted in due course of business by this same
Tbe case was tried by a jury, and a verdict was rendered for tbe defendant. A motion for a new trial was made on several grounds, complaining of tbe charge of tbe court, and on tbe general grounds tbat tbe verdict was contrary to law, evidence, etc. Tbe court refused tbe motion for a new trial, apd tbat refusal is tbe cause of tbe preseut writ of error.
"What diligence did the bank owe to the railway company or to McMillan & Co. ? Every one owes diligence to sound morality and pure principles of honesty, and that much diligence every one must exercise; but here-are special claims upon diligence on the part of people-whose negligence caused this whole trouble and brought about all this complication. What right did they have to insist upon minute examination of paper so different ? The amounts differed, and neither the amounts, dates nor character of the paper indicated anything wrong. We think the jury should not have found this verdict. There was no proper evidence to base it on: And allowing that the charge of the court was correct,
..Judgment reversed.