Borden & Co. v. Vinegar Bend Lumber Co.

56 So. 775 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911

PELHAM, J.

Appellant in the court below recovered a judgment against appellee, and on the motion of the appellee the trial court set aside the judgment and ordered a new trial. The judgment of the circuit court in setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial is. here assigned as error.

The grounds of appellee’s motion for a. new trial were,,, in effect, that the judgment was excessive, contrary to-law, and contrary to the evidence.

*356A careful examination of the evidence set out in the hill of exceptions does not lead us to the conclusion that it so plainly and palpably supports the verdict set aside by the trial court in the exercise of its discretion as to authorize us, in reviewing the case, to reverse the order of the court in granting the motion.

The trial judge, having a better opportunity for pronouncing upon the weight and convincing power of the evidence, is given a discretion in passing upon motions for new trial, and his action will not be reversed where the discretion has been exercised in granting such a motion unless the evidence plainly and palpably supports the verdict.—Cobb v. Malone, 92 Ala. 630, 9 South. 738; Smith v. Tombigbee & Northern R. Co., 141 Ala. 332. 37 South. 389; Woodroof v. Hall et al., 157 Ala. 416, 47 South. 570.

The original suit was brought by the appellant against the appellee, seeking to recover $2,000 damages for breach of a contract to sell and deliver lumber, and appellee, besides the general issue, filed pleas of set-off, claiming $1,000 due it from appellant under a prior contract, to which claim appellant set up accord and satisfaction.

While we deem it necessary to lay down certain rules for the guidance of the court in another trial, we refrain from discussing the evidence at any length, lest what we might say should have a tendency to prejudice the issues of fact. On the proposition of mitigating the loss it is only necessary to say that we see no reason, as a matter of law, why the rule requiring the damaged party to minimize his damages as far as he can reasonably do so should exclude an obligation, to buy from the party breaching the contract if purchase can be made from him that will minimize the loss without abandoning the contract or waiving any right of action for damages for *357a breach growing out- of it. It seems to ns that the rule to this effect is correct, as declared in Lawrence v. Porter, 63 Fed. 62, 11 C. C. A. 27, 26 L. R. A. 167.

We state the following rules as applicable to the evidence as now before us on the proposition of accord and satisfaction. No part of the $3,937.06 paid by the appellant under the former contract designated as “116 stump” can be regarded as a consideration for relinquishing the balance claimed by the appellee, as due on the contract and pleaded as a set-off in this suit, as no dispute existed between the parties as to this sum’s being due and payable at the time it was paid, and no concession was made by the appellant in making this payment, so far as the evidence before us shows, that would be a good consideration for a concession made by the appellee in receiving the smaller amount in satisfaction of the entire claim. The claim was for an unliquidated demand and the balance over and above $3,937.06 only was in dispute. Then had appellant tendered and paid the smaller amount in settlement of the entire claim, and had the appellee accepted it without protest, in satisfaction of the entire debt, this would have been an accord and satisfaction.

Or had the appellant tendered and paid by way of compromise something more than it admitted to be due, in satisfaction of the entire debt, and had the appellee accepted such a compromise payment on an unliquidated demand, this would have been an accord and satisfaction of the entire- claim. But unless some other consideration than the payment by the appellant of the undisputed $3,937.06 moved between the parties, or unless appellée received the payment in satisfaction of the entire claim under contract “116 stump,” or there were mutual concessions attendant upon the payment and receipt of the smaller amount that would be a sufficient *358consideration, the appellant’s special replication setting np accord and satisfaction of the demand claimed by appellee’s pleas of set-off must fail.—Hodges v. Tennessee Co., 123 Ala. 573, 26 South. 490; Hand Lumber Co. v. Hall, 147 Ala. 561, 41 South. 78.

The court committed no error under the established rules for reviewing orders granting new trials, and the ■case is affirmed.-

Affirmed.