49 S.E.2d 159 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1948
There was no error requiring the grant of a new trial, in the various rulings and instructions excepted to (and stated at length in the opinion of the court, infra); and the evidence authorized the verdict.
The essential allegations of the petition, as amended, were in substance as follows: (1) that the defendant is subject to the jurisdiction of the court; (2) that the defendant injured and damaged the plaintiff in the sum of $4640 by reason of the following facts; (3) that on December 10, 1945, the plaintiff purchased from the defendant 74 hogs at $13.50 per head, or a total sum of $999; (4) that the sale was without express warranty, but the hogs were purchased upon the warranty implied by law that they were merchantable and reasonably suited to the use intended; (5) that at the time of delivery of the hogs by the defendant to the plaintiff, the hogs, or some of them, were infected with some kind of contagious and deadly disease, the name of said disease being unknown to petitioner, and were unfit for the use intended; however, the disease had not developed to the extent that it was apparent upon or could have been discovered by inspection, and the defect was latent; (6) that one of the hogs purchased from the defendant died on December 11, which was the next day after said hogs were delivered to the home or farm of the plaintiff, and that two days later about one-fourth of said hogs were sick from said infectious and contagious disease and unable to get upon their feet and two died on December 15; that *587 thereupon the plaintiff went to the defendant and reported said sickness to him and the defendant prescribed medicines and treatment for the hogs and sold to the plaintiff medicines for the treatment of the disease, which remedies were administered by the plaintiff, but the treatments were of no avail; that the hogs continued to die each day thereafter in spite of the treatments until 60 of them had died; and that the hogs died from two to five a day, the exact number and date said hogs died being unknown to the plaintiff for the reason that he did not keep a record of the day and number that died, but all of them died between December 11 and January 28, 1946; that the hogs which so died were purchased from the defendant at $13.50 per head for a total of $810; (7) that the plaintiff is engaged in the business of raising hogs for the market, and, at the time of the purchase of said hogs from the defendant, had on hand at his farm a large herd of hogs and valuable brood sows which were in good health and condition at that time; (8) that upon learning that the hogs the plaintiff had purchased from the defendant were infected with disease, the plaintiff isolated them and separated them from his herd in an effort to prevent the spread of the disease to his herd; but in spite of the efforts of the plaintiff in taking every reasonable precaution to keep his herd from becoming infected with the contagious and deadly disease, they did become infected; that the hogs owned by the plaintiff began to show the same signs of disease and illness as the hogs the plaintiff purchased from the defendant about January 1, 1946, and said hogs began to die on January 5, 1946; that the exact number of said hogs that died each day is unknown to petitioner as he kept no record of the date and number of hogs that died each day, but that by January 26, 1946, five brood sows weighing between 650 and 750 pounds each and 95 other hogs of the approximate weight of 150 pounds each had died; that the reasonable market value of these hogs was $3,330 in addition to the 60 hogs purchased from the defendant; (9) that the petitioner did all that he could to save said hogs by doctoring them, employing veterinarians, purchasing medicines, and, as fast as the hogs died, burying the carcasses to prevent spread of the disease, and by transporting carcasses of dead hogs to Atlanta, Georgia, to the laboratory of the State Veterinarian's Office for examination, *588 to a total expense of $500, thus making a total loss and damage to the petitioner in the sum of $4,640, the amount sued for; and that attached to the petition is an itemized statement of all the expenses incurred by the plaintiff on account of the death and disease of the hogs, which is marked as Exhibit A and made a part of this paragraph; (10) that the sole proximate cause of the plaintiff's loss and damage was brought about by the defendant selling him said infected and diseased hogs, and that on account thereof, the defendant has injured and damaged the plaintiff in the full and complete sum aforesaid; and (11) that the defendant has failed and refuses to pay said damages, although though a demand for payment has been made upon him by the plaintiff before the filing of this suit.
The grounds of the defendant's demurrer which were overruled are substantially as follows: (1) the petition fails to set forth any cause of action against the defendant; (2) the allegations of paragraph five of said petition are demurred to for that the same are mere conclusions of the pleader, and the plaintiff should be required to set forth the alleged infectious and contagious disease with which said hogs were alleged to have been infected, so as to put this defendant on notice of what his claim is with reference thereto; it being alleged in paragraph 9 of said petition that veterinarians were employed to treat the hogs and the plaintiff seeking recovery of additional damages against the defendant for this reason, he should therefore be required to allege what the disease was so as to put this defendant on notice in order that he might investigate and defend this suit; and (3) paragraph 6 is demurred to for that the same is immaterial and irrelevant, it not being alleged therein that the hog that is alleged to have died on December 11, 1945, died from any alleged infectious or contagious disease that the plaintiff claims that the other hogs died from; and if he seeks to hold the defendant liable for the death of said hog, he should be required to allege what caused its death. 1. The petition in the instant case, while it may not be perfect or free from defects which might have been taken advantage of by a special demurrer based upon the proper *589 grounds, is not subject to a general demurrer. The action is essentially one for the breach of an implied warranty in law under Code § 96-301 (2), which is: "If there is no express covenant of warranty, the purchaser must exercise caution in detecting defects; the seller, however, in all cases (unless expressly or from the nature of the transaction excepted) warrants that . . 2. The article sold is merchantable, and reasonably suited to the use intended." The effect of a breach of the warranty provided by this section is set out in Code § 96-306 as follows: "A breach of warranty, express or implied, shall not annul the sale if executed, but shall give the purchaser a right to damages."
In Snowden v. Waterman Co.,
When the same case was again before the Supreme Court of Georgia (Snowden v. Waterman Co.,
The foregoing quoted excerpts from opinions of the Supreme *591 Court of this State we take to be the law to which the courts of this State are committed in the class of cases within which the present case falls. Under these excerpts, it is seen that the law under Code § 96-301 (2) implies a warranty that the purchased animals are free from latent contagious disease which would render them totally worthless, in the absence of an express or implied waiver of the warranty. The essential elements of a damage action for the breach of such a warranty then are: (1) an executed sale of animals; (2) the absence of a waiver of the warranty implied by the law; (3) breach of the warranty by the existence of the contagious disease in the animals at the time of the sale; (4) that the defects were latent and not discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the buyer; (5) that the animals are totally worthless as a result of the disease (total worthlessness supplanting a stipulation that the animals are unmerchantable and not reasonably suited to the use intended); (6) the damages accruing as a direct and natural consequence of the breach; and (7) that the buyer exercised due diligence in avoiding the consequences of the breach. Applying these essentials to the petition in the present case, we see: first, the executed sale set out in paragraph three; second, affirmation that the sale was made under the implied warranty in paragraph four; third, breach of the warranty by the existence of the disease in the hogs at the time of delivery in paragraph five; fourth, the defects were latent and not discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care in paragraph five; fifth, the animals were totally worthless because 60 of them died from the disease and had to be buried to prevent the spread of the disease in paragraphs six and nine; sixth, the damages accruing as a direct and natural consequence of the breach are alleged in paragraphs six, eight and nine; and seventh, that the plaintiff was reasonably diligent in avoiding the consequence of the breach is alleged in paragraph six, eight and nine. The petition therefore alleged a cause of action under the rule of the Waterman cases, supra; and it was not subject to a general demurrer.
It is true, as the defendant contends, that a general demurrer admits only facts properly pleaded, and does not admit conclusions. He argues that the petition is based upon a conclusion which renders its allegation of the essential elements of the cause *592 of action defective in that the allegation of the petition — that the hogs infected with a contagious disease were unfit for the use intended — is unsupported by allegations of what the use intended was and that the petition does not allege that the hogs were totally worthless, and that the petition must be construed most strongly against the pleader to hold that they were therefore merchantable. However, it will be noted that the petition alleges that the plaintiff is "engaged in the business of raising hogs for the market." On demurrer the petition must be considered as a whole; and if the hogs were inflicted with the infectious and contagious disease, as alleged in the petition, from which disease one of the hogs died on December 11, the next day after delivery to the buyer on December 10, 1945, with which two days later about one-fourth of the hogs were sick, from which two died on December 15, from which said hogs continued to die each day thereafter until 60 of them had died and from which said hogs died from two to five a day the exact number and date said hogs died being unknown to petitioner for the reason that he did not keep a record of the day and number that died, but from which all of them died between the 11th day of December, 1945, and the 28th day of January, 1946, and as a result of which disease all of the carcasses were buried to prevent the spread of the disease or transported to Atlanta for examination to determine the nature of the disease which caused the death of the hogs, it seems to us that this demands a conclusion as a matter of law that the hogs were not merchantable and reasonably suited to the use intended and, even further, demands a conclusion as a matter of law that the hogs were totally worthless and unsuited for any purpose by any person whatsoever. If the evidentiary or preliminary facts alleged in a petition demand a conclusion that all the essential elements of a cause of action are set forth, it is sufficient as against general demurrer for the conclusion is good in law. The petition in the instant case alleged evidentiary or preliminary facts, as set forth above, which we think, if proved, demanded a conclusion which is good in law that the hogs which perished from the disease and were buried to prevent its spread or shipped to Atlanta for analysis were totally worthless and that the petition was not subject to the objection that some of its essential allegations are mere conclusions not good in law. *593 The arguments of counsel for the defendant that for all that appeared from the petition, the plaintiff may have purchased the hogs to make lard for other than human consumption or to feed them to wild animals are also without merit.
2. The defendant in his argument on the second ground of his demurrer urges that the petition nowhere alleges the name of the infectious and contagious disease with which the hogs were alleged by the plaintiff to be infected; that, while the plaintiff alleged in the petition that he did not know the name of the disease, it appeared on the trial of the case that the plaintiff did know the name of the disease; that the plaintiff should have been required to allege the name of the disease because, by the plaintiff being allowed to keep the defendant ignorant of the disease, the defendant was unable to intelligently prepare his defense; and that the allegation that the disease was infectious and contagious is a conclusion unsupported by other allegations of fact.
"It is . . necessary that all of these elements [of the cause of action] should appear in the averments of the petition. The absence of any one of them would make the petition substantially defective. The presence of all [of them] would make the petition good in substance. If in the allegations in reference to any of these elements the averments of the petition do not deal with the subject with that particularity which would be required to put the defendant on notice of what it had to meet, such defects can be taken advantage of by special demurrer, and would be fatal in the absence of an appropriate amendment." Pierce v. SeaboardAir-Line Ry.,
Paragraph five of the petition alleges that the name of the disease was unknown to the plaintiff; however, paragraph nine alleges that the plaintiff employed veterinarians and also that he transported carcasses of hogs which had died with the disease to the State Veterinarian's Laboratory in Atlanta for analysis. *594
Even if it may be thus considered that the plaintiff refutes his own allegation — that he did not know the name of the disease — in his petition, as well as in the evidence in the case, it is alleged in paragraph six of the petition that the plaintiff went to the defendant and told him of the disease with which the hogs were suffering and that the defendant prescribed medicines for the illness. It would seem that the defendant was charged by the petition with notice of the disease and we do not think that it was error to overrule this ground of the demurrer. Conceding, however, but not deciding, that the information sought to be elicited by this special ground of the demurrer should have been given, it clearly appears that the defendant could not have been put to any disadvantage in preparing his defense by reason of the overruling of this ground of the demurrer because it appears from the evidence in the record that the defendant also had other hogs which suffered from the same disease, the name of which the defendant knew and which disease the defendant, being well versed in hog ailments, treated in his own hogs. It also appears from the evidence that the defendant was sufficiently put on notice of the name of the disease to cause to appear at the trial two expert witnesses, who were practitioners in the treatment of hog diseases, both of whom presented excellent evidence in his behalf. It therefore appears from the record that the defendant was already in possession of the information called for by the demurrer; and, assuming that the trial judge erred in not requiring the plaintiff to give this information on special demurrer, under the facts of the case we think that the error was harmless. See Cline v. Nelson,
If the allegations of the petition in regard to the hogs being infected at the time of the sale and in regard to the communication of the disease to other hogs and their resulting death are proved, the conclusion that the disease with which they were alleged to be infected was infectious and contagious would be demanded as a matter of law; therefore, such allegation was not subject to the objection urged and this ground of the demurrer is without merit.
3. Ground three of the demurrer and the argument thereon attack paragraph six of the petition by objecting that nowhere in the petition is it averred that the first hog which died, died of *595 the contagious disease in question; and that consequently the plaintiff can not hold the defendant liable for the death of this hog without alleging the cause of his death. Paragraph six, as amended, alleges in effect that one of the hogs purchased from the defendant died on December 11, which was the next day after said hogs were delivered to the home or farm of the plaintiff, and that two days later about one-fourth of said hogs were sick from said infectious and contagious disease and unable to get upon their feet and two died on December 15. All that a special demurrer requires of a petition is reasonable definiteness and certainty, and it does not require that the pleader must indulge in needless particularities. It is true that the pleader must allege that the hogs died from the disease in question, but the allegations of each paragraph and of the petition must be construed as a whole. So construing paragraph six, the entire theme of the paragraph, above set out, is that the hogs were sick and were dying of this particular disease. Conceding that the allegation as requested would have been more proper, such a trifling defect, when the entire context conveys the proper meaning and that meaning only, does not form the basis for a meritorious special demurrer.
4. The defendant in special ground two contends that the court charged specifically the contentions of the plaintiff without in like manner stating the corresponding contentions of the defendant, and that this was bound to unduly emphasize the contentions of the plaintiff and give to them undue prominence. After reading the charge, we think it is patent that the judge merely stated to the jury in a narrative form what was alleged in the plaintiff's petition. The defendant's answer, except for admitting jurisdiction and admitting in paragraph 10 thereof that he refused to pay plaintiff's claim, either merely denied, or stated that for want of sufficient information he could neither admit nor deny, the allegations in all of the paragraphs of the petition. The judge charged with reference to the contentions in the answer, which alleged no affirmative or specific defenses, as follows: "Mr. Fite comes in and files an answer to the plaintiff's petition, and he admits that he is a resident of this county, and the remaining allegations of the plaintiff's petition, Mr. Fite, either denies them, or says that for want of sufficient information that *596 he can neither admit nor deny the allegations in the plaintiff's petition which he does not deny outright. Gentlemen, I have not undertaken to give you all the contentions of the parties with absolute faithfulness as to detail. You will have the pleadings out with you, which consist of the plaintiff's petition, and the amendment to the plaintiff's petition and the answer of the defendant. You may refer to these pleadings as often as you deem necessary in order to determine exactly what the contentions of the parties are." It will thus be seen that the court charged all of the contentions of the defendant which were contained in his answer, almost in the exact words of his answer.
"It is one thing to state what a party contends, and another and very different thing to state the law applicable to such contention." Gledhill v. Harvey,
5. Code § 96-301 in its entirety provides: "Implied warranty. — If there is no express covenant of warranty, the purchaser must exercise caution in detecting defects; the seller, however, in all cases (unless expressly or from the nature of the transaction excepted) warrants that — 1. He has a valid title and right tosell. 2. The article sold is merchantable, and reasonably suited to the use intended. 3. He knows of no latent defects undisclosed." (Italics ours.) *597
The court charged this entire section including the words which we have italicized. The italicized portion is objected to on the ground that there is no issue involving title and that the charge on this subject was prejudicial error because it was not authorized by the evidence and therefore tended to mislead and confuse the jury. Even if the italicized part of the Code section was inapplicable, it would not require the grant of a new trial. The charge as a whole clearly instructed the jury that they should find for the plaintiff only if under the evidence they found that the hogs in question were not merchantable and reasonably suited to the use intended. Battle v. Williford,
6. The presiding judge in general terms submitted to the jury the law applicable to a warranty implied by law and clearly instructed the jury that they should find for the plaintiff if, under the evidence, they found that there was no express warranty but only a warranty implied by law, which had not been waived, and that the hogs in question — to which he definitely referred in his charge — were not merchantable and reasonably suited for the purpose intended. This being the only issue involved, he was not required, in the absence of a proper and timely written request, to instruct the jury more definitely as to the contentions of the defendant. Kimbrel v. Grow,
The charge stated distinctly the issue which the jury was required to pass upon and it was not incumbent upon the judge to attempt a summary of the evidence or to state the issue more fully in the absence of such timely written request. Mills v.Sanders,
7. "`The law allows [the trial judge] to refuse or grant new trials in the exercise of a legal discretion, but it does not give this court any discretion in the matter. It can only grant new trials where errors of law have been committed, or when the trial judge has abused his discretion in refusing a new trial.'"Jackson v. State,
In this case the evidence was contradictory and the verdict was authorized by some of the evidence. The trial judge, having overruled the motion for a new trial, and no error of law appearing, this court has no discretion in the matter of granting a new trial on the general grounds.
Judgment affirmed. Gardner and Townsend, JJ., concur.