96 Ga. 44 | Ga. | 1895
The questions made in this case, except as hereinafter stated, are sufficiently set forth in the official report of the facts.
The motion to reinstate rests upon the hypothesis that the verdict originally rendered in the cause was void. If the verdict had been void in its entirety, the cause would have remained still pending and undetermined; but the vice of the hypothesis consists in the assumption that the entire verdict was void. It will be observed from an examination of the record in this case, a synopsis of which is contained in the plaintiff’s petition, set forth in the official report, that the plaintiff’s original suit was instituted for the recovery of a debt due by the defendant railroad company to him for labor performed as a contractor in and about the construction of its railroad, and, in addition thereto, for the foreclosure of a lien upon the railroad of the defendant. Upon the trial of that cause the jury found in favor of the plaintiff generally, but limited by the terms of its verdict the lien of the plaintiff' to a portion of the railroad of the defendant. Whether this verdict was rendered by consent, or whether as the result of protracted litigation, the record does not disclose. In either event, however, it was the finding of the jury empaneled in that case for the trial of the issues of fact set forth in the pleadings. Upon the one hand was the allegation of the plaintiff' of the fact of indebtedness and the existence of his lien upon the entire road of the defendant, and, presumably, on the -other hand was the contention of the defendant to the contrary, although no written defense to that effect appears from the record to have been filed. The verdict in that cause was not excepted to; but a number of years after its rendition, upon the judgment based thereon, the plaintiff claimed a certain fund arising from the sale of the railroad property upon
The proposition now is, to reopen for adjudication the entire question as to the existence of a lien in favor ■of the plaintiff. This was a valid verdict for the amount of the plaintiff’s debt. It therefore cannot be said that it is a void verdict. It was ineffectual as asserting and establishing the lien, and void pro tanto. On exception taken in time, this partial invalidity of the judgment would have justified the court in avoiding it and awarding a new trial, provided the finding of the jury were not in harmony with the plaintiff’s testimony seeking to establish his lien. If the jury had found contrary to the evidence and established only a partial lien, when, as a matter of law, the plaintiff was entitled to a lien upon the entire road, the court would doubtless have granted a new trial. But acquiescing in this verdict, it is as conclusive against the plaintiff as to those things it does not find as it is in his favor as to those things
These considerations lead us to the conclusion, that however strong and apparent the moral equities in favor of this plaintiff may be, the courts cannot grant to him the relief he asks, without manifest violence to principles of law and rules of pleading which are absolutely essential to a well ordered judicial system.
Let the judgment of the court below be Affirmed.