15 Ga. App. 95 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
A mortgage fi. fa. in favor of Hampton and against Strond was levied upon a borse in the possession of Early, who filed a claim affidavit and executed a forthcoming bond, with Camp as security thereon, which obligated Early and Camp to deliver the horse to the sheriff of Eloyd county on the date and at the place of sale, if it should be found subject to the fi. fa. On the trial of
The amendment was not verified when it was offered, as provided
1. The Civil Code, § 5640, provides distinctly that where an amendment, offered after the time allowed for answer has expired, sets up any new facts or defense, notice of which was not given by the original plea or answer, it shall not be allowed, “unless at the time of filing such amended plea or. answer containing the new
2. “Under the expression ‘act of God’ are comprehended all misfortunes and actions arising from inevitable necessity which human prudence could not foresee or prevent. Hence it is held that illness, being beyond the power of man to control or prevent, is the act of God.” 1 Words & Phrases, 124. In Fish v. Chapman, 2 Ga. 349, 356-7 (46 Am. D. 393), Judge Nisbet said, that “unavoidable” is synonymous with inevitable, and inevitable or unavoidable accidents are acts of Godj by which is meant “any accident produced by physical causes which are inevitable; such as lightning, storms, perils of the sea, earthquakes, inundations, sudden death, or illness.” In Young v. Waldrip, 91 Ga. 765 (18 S. E. 23), where a mule fell in a post-hole on the premises of the person chargeable with its care, which hole was overgrown and concealed by grass, the court held that this was not an act of God, and would not relieve a claimant of the property from his contract to produce it under the provisions of a forthcoming bond executed by himu The court said: “-A plea alleging the death of the mule without negligence or fault of the claimant, was insufficient and should have been stricken on demurrer, there being no allegation that the death
Again referring to the case of Young v. Waldrip, supra, it will be noted that the court there said: “The falling of a mule into a post-hole overgrown and concealed with grass, if this occurred on the premises of the person chargeable with the care of the mule, is not the act of God and will not relieve a claimant from producing the mule in fulfilment of his contract in the forthcoming bond. The evidence in this case does not show upon whose premises and under what circumstances in detail the mule was killed. The burden of proof being upon the defendants to account fully for the non-production of the property, the finding of the court in favor of the defendants was unwarranted.” From this it appears that had the proof established that the concealed post-hole, which brought about the death of the mule, was elsewhere than on the premises of the person .chargeable with the care of the mule, and that the injury occurred under circumstances exonerating him from the charge of negligence, it would have been held that the jury would be authorized to find the death of the mule to be the act of God. In Moon v. Wright, 12 Ga. App. 659 (78 S. E. 141), the court said: “And it was not shown that the death of the live stock was due to the act of God and was in nowise the result of the conduct or negligence of either the defendant or his sureties.” See also Rockmore v. Garner, 9 Ga. App. 369, 370 (71 S. E. 506).
We think the amendatory plea came up to the requirements of the law, and the trial court erred in disallowing it, and in thereby preventing the defendants from placing before the jury whatever evidence they might have been able to produce tending to establish that the horse died through no fault or negligence on their part, and that its illness and death were an act of God. And since the amendment set up a legal defense, the court erred in limiting the consideration of the jury merely to the value of the horse at the
3, 4. The plaintiffs in error complain that the evidence did not warrant the verdict, but, on the contrary, demanded a verdict in their favor, because the record does not disclose that any demand for the property was made by the sheriff on either the principal or the surety on the forthcoming bond, or that the sale was legally advertised. It is well settled that the law of this State does not require such a demand in order to constitute a breach of the bond. A breach is occasioned if the officer regularly advertises the property for sale, and it is not produced at the time and place of sale. Stroud v. Hancock, 116 Ga. 332 (42 S. E. 496); Thompson v. Mapp, 6 Ga. 260; Mapp v. Thompson, 9 Ga. 42; Hogan v. Morris, 7 Ga. App. 232, 235 (66 S. E. 550). Here it does not appear that any demand was made, nor does it appear, from the petition or from the original answer, that the necessity for advertisement was removed by any act of the defendants, or by a loss of the property through an act of God. Where property for which a forthcoming bond has been given has been sold and the proceeds appropriated by the makers of the bond, who thus put it out of .their power to deliver the property to the levying officer in compliance with the terms of the bond, their conduct constitutes a breach of the bond and dispenses with advertisement; and by parity of reasoning it appears to us that if the petition or the answer (in behalf of all the obligors in the bond) had set out facts showing the impossibility of making any delivery of the property to the levying officer, it would have appeared that there was no necessity for readvertising the property, in order to constitute a breach of the forthcoming bond; and hence the lack of advertisement would be immaterial. Lassiter v. Byrd, 55 Ga. 606; Stinson v. Hall, 54 Ga. 676; Bowen v. Fenny, 76 Ga. 743; Bowden v. Taylor, 81 Ga. 199 (6 S. E. 277); Spence v. Coney, 97 Ga. 442 (25 S. E. 316); Anderson v. Banks, 92 Ga. 123 (18 S. E. 364); Williams v. Empire etc. Co., 97 Ga. 446 (25 S. E. 172). Since, under our ruling, the case must go back for a new trial, if at that trial the amendatory plea heretofore disallowed by the court is again offered (with, of course, proper verification if it should then be objected to for lack of such verification), this would dispense with proof of advertisement, since it appears therefrom that the horse was dead, and the principal and
Judgment reversed.