15 Ga. App. 741 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
I. Epstein & Brother Company, alleging that it was the purchaser of the accounts and other choses in action of J. M. Yereen, a bankrupt, brought suit upon open account against W. B. Thomas, alleging an indebtedness upon his part on an unpaid balance of an account running from September 1, 1908, to February 3, 1911, of $394.50. Attached to the petition was a statement purporting to set forth each item of the defendant’s purchases, with sundry credits of cash and of articles of farm produce. The defendant filed a sworn answer, in which he admitted only the allegations of the first paragraph of the petition, in regard to jurisdiction. Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the answer respectively state that they are in answer to paragraphs 1 and 2 of the petition, but it is plain, from the contents of these paragraphs of the answer, that they are really responsive to paragraphs 2 and 3, and that the use of the words “one” and “two” was a mere clerical mistake of the scrivener.
In paragraph 5 of the answer the defendant attempted to plead payment, as follows: “Defendant says that if he ever owed J. M. Yereen any such account as the one sued on, it has been long ago fully paid; defendant having paid to said J. M. Yereen all that ho owed him for the period covered by said account, some of the payments being made during said period and some possibly shortly after the last date of said account; some of the payments were made in cash and some by cheek; defendant has destroyed his vouchers covering said period, thinking he would never have any use for same, and kept no books of account of the transactions with the said J. M. Yereen, took no receipts for payments made, and can not, therefore, solely from memory, give the times of payment, nor the amounts of the payments, but all were made to said J. M. Yereen, and satisfied all the demands of the said J. 'M. Yereen covering the period of said account. Said payments were made prior to any bankruptcy by J. M. Yereen. Defendant remembers one credit as follows: When J. M. Yereen went into business about four years ago he owed defendant $80, which was to be placed to defendant’s credit and to offset purchases by defendant. Such credit was never made. If the books of said J. M. Yereen showed the proper credits, they would verify all the allegations of this petition.” In paragraph 6 the defendant pleaded the statute of limitations as to items amounting to $60.10 of the account, including all items down to November 29, 1908.
1. The defendant in error filed a motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions, upon the ground that the following assignment of error is insufficient: “To the judgment of the court overruling plaintiff’s demurrers to the defendant’s answer, and to the ruling of the court overruling plaintiff’s motion for new trial, the plaintiff excepted, now excepts, and assigns error thereon, and says that the court erred in overruling said motion for new trial, on each and all of the grounds therein stated, and erred in overruling plaintiff’s demurrers, and shows that said ruling was contrary to law.” The motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions is not meritorious. Under the mandate of the General Assembly, we must decline to dismiss the ease if “there is enough in the bill of exceptions or the transcript of the record presented, or both together to enable the court to ascertain substantially the real questions in the case which the parties seek to have decided therein.” Civil’Code, § 6183. It is very plain to us that the plaintiff in error is presenting for adjm dication two distinct questions, though they are stated together; and the error complained of in each instance, without regard to the merits of the contentions, is quite apparent. In the assignment of error it is stated, in effect, that the court erred in overruling the motion for new trial for each and all of the reasons stated in the motion, which is a part of the record. In connection with this (though the assignment could more properly have been made in another part of the bill of exceptions) the plaintiff in error alleges that the court “erred in overruling plaintiff’s demurrer, and shows that said ruling was contrary to law.” Since the demurrer is in the record, the court can refer to the record for the merits of this contention. The present motion to dismiss seems to be very
2. The error of the defendant in misnumbering the paragraphs of the plaintiff’s petition which he sought to answer could have been corrected by the filing of a proper special demurrer, but the general demurrer to the answer was ineffective to present the point to the court, and hence there was no error in overruling it. When the contents of the second and third paragraphs of the answer, in which certain paragraphs of the petition are erroneously referred to as paragraphs 1 and 2, are considered, it is very plain that these paragraphs of the answer are directly responsive to paragraphs 2 and 3 of the petition, and that the use of the words “one” and “two” was a mere clerical error. That this is true is rendered more plain by the fact that paragraph 1 of the petition is admitted in paragraph 1 of the answer, and paragraph 4 of the petition is denied by paragraph 4 of the answer.
3. Nothing is better settled than that a plea of payment must state when and how, and to whom, the alleged payment was made, unless the omission to do so is waived by failure to demur. It has frequently been held that a mere general statement that the plaintiff’s demand has been fully paid will not suffice as against a special demurrer calling for such specific information as would enable the plaintiff to disprove the plea of payment. In the present case the defendant alleged the person to whom the payments were made (for it is stated in the plea that all the payments were made to J. M, Yereen), and the defendant gave a reason for his inability to state the exact times of the several payments, and the respective amounts, which addressed itself to the discretion of the court. Conceding that a good plea of payment must declare the time, place, and circumstances of the payment, as well as to whom it was made, it is nevertheless true that this definiteness of 'statement is required merely in order not to deprive the opposite party of the substantial right of disproving the alleged payments; and cases may arise
4. On the trial the plaintiff introduced J. M. Yereen to substantiate the correctness of the account, but no books of original entry were offered. The witness Yereen testified that the statement of account attached to the suit was not prepared by him. He swore further that the items of the account were correct, but as to many of them he did not claim to have any recollection, though he testified positively to a few items to which his attention was specifically called. The defendant testified, that while he could not remember the dates of the different payments made by him, and he had destroyed his cancelled checks, representing some of the payments, he had made numerous payments, some of which he instanced, in addition to the $80, which should have been placed to his credit before any purchases were made, one of these items being $40 paid shortly before Yereen, his original creditor, went into bankruptcy. He further testified (in substantiation of his statement that the payments made by him settled his indebtedness) that he quit trading with Yereen several months before Yereen became a bankrupt, and that neither before nor after the payment of $40 .was any demand for payment made upon him by Yereen or by the trustee in bankruptcy, and no demand was made by the present plaintiff before the filing of the suit. The evidence was in conflict; and, there being no error of law assigned upon any ruling other than the judgment overruling the demurrer to the answer, we can not hold that the court erred in ícfucing to set aside a verdict which the jury evidently based upon the superior credibility to them of the defendant’s testimony to that offered in behalf of the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.