11 Ga. App. 818 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Hixon sued Council to recover $17,471.11, alleged to be due for services rendered the' defendant by the plaintiff as an attorney at law, and for expenses incurred during the rendition
Mrs. Hawkins, the former owner of the “Hawkins, title,” had
A demurrer to the petition was overruled, and the defendant excepted pendente lite. The defendant answered, admitting the execution of the original contract, but claimed that at the time of the settlement with Shipp & Sheppard, he settled also with Hixon; that the contract was thereupon cancelled; that he made no agreement to pay the plaintiff on a percentage basis for future services, but agreed only to pay the reasonable value thereof. Defendant admitted an indebtedness of $500.41 as expenses incurred, and tendered to the plaintiff $2,500 in full settlement of all his demands. On February 2, 1910, the case was referred to an auditor. The time for filing the auditor’s report was extended from term to term until October 30, 1911, when, by consent of counsel for both sides, the court passed an order extending to twenty days prior to
The case went to trial, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $7,550.41, besides interest thereon from September 9, 1909. Defendant’s motion for 'a new trial having been overruled, he excepted, assigning error upon the overruling of his demurrer, upon the sustaining of the motion to disregard the auditor’s report, and upon the judgment overruling the motion for a new trial.
2. It is contended that the court erred in withdrawing the case from the auditor. In the original order appointing an auditor no provision was made as to the time within which the report should be made. On February 9, 1911, an order was passed extending the time for filing the report and directing the auditor to make report “as soon as practicable.” The next order was that of October 30, peremptorily directing the 'auditor to make report twenty days prior to the January term, 1912, and providing that in default thereof the case be withdrawn from his consideration. It is now contended that as the auditor was appointed upon motion of the plaintiff, he could not assume the position that the case was one which should be tried by a jury; and the principle is invoked that where one party successfully assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding, he can not thereafter assume, as to the same subject-matter and against the same adversary, a contrary position. Bedingfield v. Bates, 2 Ga. App. 111 (58 S. E. 320); Haber-Blum-Bloch Hat Co. v. Friesleben, 5 Ga. App. 123 (62 S. E. 712); Central Ry. Co. v. Waldo, 9 Ga. App. 182 (70 S. E. 1021). It is also insisted that a judgment entered at one term, even though erroneous, can not be vacated at a subsequent term. Lanier v. Byrd, 115 Ga. 198 (41 S. E. 683).
Both of these contentions of counsel are abstractly correct, but they have no application in the present case. Unquestionably the original order appointing the auditor was the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction and binding as such. If this order had limited the time within which the report should be filed, after the expiration of this time the auditor would have had no jurisdiction over the case. Peavy v. McDonald, 119 Ga. 865 (47 S. E. 203). The appointment of the auditor did not have the effect of depriving
3. The original contract between the defendant on the one side
The plaintiff does testify that the original contract was “enlarged,” so as to embrace lands other than those referred to in the contract; but taking his testimony altogether, the jury were authorized to find that the defendant agreed to pay five per cent of the value of any timber, title to which was acquired as a result of the services of the plaintiff and accepted by the defendant. Hnder the plaintiffs testimony, he rendered the services which he engaged to perform, and the amount of compensation which the defendant
The court charged the jury, in substance, that if they should find that the original contract was never abrogated, but that the services rendered by the plaintiff were in pursuance of an enlargement 'and extension of that contract, he would be entitled to recover five per cent, of the value of the property acquired by the defendant as a result of plaintiff’s services. As we have seen, this charge was based upon misconstruction of the contract. But the error thus committed was not of sufficient materiality to require a reversal. Plaintiff testified in substance that the defendant agreed to pay him five per cent, of the value of the timber on the land, title to which was acquired by the defendant. If the jury believed this to be true, it was immaterial whether the five per cent, clause in the original contract was continued in force or not; 'and the instruction that, before the plaintiff could recover, the jury must believe that the original contract was continued in force in all of its terms, and enlarged so as to include additional lands, really - operated more against the plaintiff than in his favor. The main and controlling question in the case was whether or not_ the plaintiff rendered the services which he claimed to have performed, and whether or not the defendant agreed to pay for these services the sum contended for by the plaintiff. Both of these issues having been-settled in favor of the plaintiff, we do not think the error in the charge above referred to is of sufficient materiality to demand a new trial.
4. This brings us to the only remaining question in the case, viz., whether the plaintiff was entitled to interest. The parties having been unable to agree upon the value of the timber, the plaintiff called upon the defendant to fix the value under a “give-or-take proposition,” as provided for in the contract. The defendant refused, and the interest was allowed by the jury from the date of this demand and refusal. “All liquidated demands, where by
By the act of 1800 (Civil Code, § 4270) it was provided that a note payable in specifics should bear interest. In Barbee v. Andrews, supra, the statutory rule was applied to an agreement to pay a fifth of a crop for services. The present ease does not differ materially. The parol agreement as testified to by the plaintiff was that he was to receive five per cent, of the value of the timber on a specified number of acres of land. While value is a matter of opinion, and men differ as to the value of a given article or commodity, still it has but one value. There is a sum certain which represents the value, whatever may be the method employed for arriving at it. It may be left to the opinion of one man, or to arbitrators, or to the agreement of the parties interested themselves; but when ascertained, the sum represents, in legal contemplation, the value of the article, which has been all the while the . sum thus ascertained. So that if one promises to pay the value of an article, that is a sum certain, and it is immaterial how that value may be ascertained. Here the defendant’s promise was in effect an agreement to pay one twentieth of the value of the timber, and though the parties may have differed as to the value and submitted the question to a jury, or to arbitration, the sum thus ascertained was the amount which, in legal contemplation, the parties knew to be the value, and which they could- have found for themselves had they honestly pursued the right method. The fact that the contract recognized that the parties might not by agreement be able to arrive at a sum certain, and provided a method for fixing the amount in case of disagreement,'makes the sum none the less certain in legal contemplation. If the sum due had been so ascertained, then it would have represented a sum certain which had previously been agreed on, and would have borne interest from the date the amount became due and payable. The jury were called upon, not to name an arbitrary amount, but to say what sum the parties themselves
The foregoing decision deals with all of the assignments of error insisted upon in the briefs of counsel for plaintiff in error, none of which are, in our opinion, well taken. Judgment affirmed.