115 Ga. 655 | Ga. | 1902
In our opinion, the decision of this case turns upon the proper determination of the question, whether or not the contract entered into on February 25, 1892, between the Rome Street Railroad Company and Floyd County, was valid. By the terms of that contract, the railroad company agreed to pay to the county a stipulated compensation annually for the right to construct and operate its electric-railway line across the three bridges in the city of Rome, belonging to the county. If, as contended by the plaintiff in error, this contract was a nudum pactum, then the judgment of the court below was wrong; on the.other hand, if this contract was based upon a sufficient consideration, then that judgment was right. Before -this contract was entered into, the county claimed that the company could not thus use these bridges without paying to it a reasonable compensation therefor, while the railroad company claimed that it had the right to so use them without the consent of the county, and without paying any compensation whatever. Each party to the controversy appears to have been acting in perfectly good faith. Pending these conflicting contentions, negotiations were entered into by the parties, which resulted in a settlement of the matter, under which the railroad company agreed to pay to the county the sum of one hundred dollars per annum for the use of each of the three bridges, and the county, for this consideration, granted to the company “ the right to lay and maintain a single track on one side of ” each bridge, “ with the right to place electric wires and appliances and to run electric cars across said bridges.” We think that, under the evidence submitted, the presiding judge, who, by agreement of the parties, tried the case without the intervention of a jury, was authorized to find that this contract was the result of a compromise of the conflicting claims
This contract settled the disputed question as to the right of the
Certain affidavits were admitted in evidence, over the objection of the railway company that they wer„e “irrelevant and immaterial, and upon the further ground that it was sought by said testimony to set up oral statements and negotiations that occurred prior to the execution of said alleged written contracts.” These affidavits set forth the above-stated facts and circumstances leading up to the contract between the Rome Street Railroad Company and Floyd County, and also the circumstances under which this contract was modified by the one between the county and the City Electric Railway Company. In view of the ground upon which we have placed our decision in this case and the reasons which we have given therefor, it seems hardly necessary to say that, for the purposes indicated in the above discussion of the consideration for these contracts, this testimony was clearly admissible.
Judgment affirmed.