138 Ga. 496 | Ga. | 1912
B. B. Ford & Company and the Standard Marine Insurance Company Limited of Liverpool, suing for the use of the last-named company, brought an action against the Atlantic Compress Company. The substance of the petition now material is as follows: Ford & Company, between September 17, 1907, and January 30, 1908, delivered to the defendant 234 bales of cotton, taking its warehouse receipts for the same, wherein the defendant obligated itself to deliver the cotton upon the return of the receipts properly indorsed, and the payment of such charges as may have accrued thereon under the current tariff of the defendant company. On February 3, 1908, the receipts were presented to the defendant by Ford & Company and the delivery of the cotton demanded. Defendant failed and refused to deliver. Continuing tender of the receipts, and demand for delivery, and refusal to deliver were alleged. Ford & (Company held a policy of ffre insurance on the cotton, issued to them by the Standard Marine Insurance Company Limited of Liverpool. On February 12 and 16, 1908, the insurance company paid to Ford & Company, a stated amount of money as the value of the cotton, taking from the latter the receipts for the cotton issued by the defendant, “as well as a subrogation transfer of all the rights of said B. B. Ford & Company as owner of said cotton.” The petition further alleged that the defendant, “by
The petition was demurred to on several grounds to the effect: ■ (1) It appears from the petition that at the time it was filed-neither of the plaintiffs had any right to demand the cotton of the defendant, nor to recover for its refusal to deliver on' demand, and that no liability was shown on the part of defendant for the value of the cotton. (2) The_ action is founded upon an alleged breach of duty to deliver the cotton to Ford & Company, and the petition shows that when it was filed Ford & Company had no right, title, or interest in the cotton, having parted with the same to the insurance company, and no right is shown in the insurance company to.demand the delivery of the cotton, and to sue for refusal to deliver or to pay its value. (3) The suit is not maintainable by Ford & Company for the use of the insurance company, because the petition shows that, at the time of bringing the suit, Ford & Company “had parted with said cotton for full value, and had transferred all of its right of every nature therein to the” insurance company. (4) No cause of action is set forth in behalf of the insurance company, as the suit is for tort in the failure to deliver the cotton, and neither demand by it nor failure to deliver to said company is alleged, and no right of action for the alleged tort to Ford & Company was assignable to the insurance company. (5) So much of the petition as sets forth that the insurance company .took from Ford & Company “a subrogation transfer of all the rights of said B. B. Ford & Company as owner of said cotton” is demurrable, because the “subrogation transfer” and its terms are not set forth, and because no facts are alleged showing any rights of subrogation in the insurance company. (6) No cause of action is set forth in favor of either of the plaintiffs. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition. The plaintiffs excepted and brought the case here.
Counsel for defendant in error contend that the action is for a tort in the conversion of the cotton, and we assume that the trial, judge entertained the same view of the case in sustaining- the de~