159 Ga. 630 | Ga. | 1924
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
After a careful and painstaking review of the voluminous record in this case, there appears to be no reason why there should be a reversal of the judgment of the trial court upon any of the various rulings as to which complaint is made. The law of the ease was practically settled by the ruling upon the demurrers to' the answer of the defendant and the amendment thereto, in which the defendant sought by way of cross-bill to secure affirmative relief in his own behalf. The cross-bill was attacked upon the-ground that the alleged contract was unilateral and without consideration, void
But it is insisted that this was a partnership, and that the agreement as to the timber on the Newell place was partnership property. As to a similar contention it has been held that a contract is not void for want óf mutuality merely for the reason that the purchase-price was to be paid from the proceeds of the profits of a going business. Zipperer v. Helmnly, 148 Ga. 480 (97 S. E, 74); Murphy v. Creamer, 10 Ga. App. 593 (74 S. E. 61). The mere fact that Hall offered to sell the timber upon the two mentioned tracts of land at a price far below its value would not of itself render the contract -either unreasonable 'or unjust or unconscion- • able, there being nothing to show that his offer was not made of his own volition and nothing to indicate that any advantage had been taken of him by way of concealment or, misrepresentation. There is no merit in that ground of the demurrer. Occasions often -arise where one who thinks he has made a bad bargain or entered into a very disagreeable connection is glad to make some financial sacrifice in order to disengage himself and put the proceeds of a poor sale to a different use. The special demurrers were likewise properly overruled. Counsel for plaintiff in error now expressly abandon their insistence upon the demurrer to paragraph _ 17 of the cross-bill, but insist upon the demurrer to paragraph 18. In this ground of the demurrer the plaintiff insisted that the' allegation that the defendant accepted the offer made by the plaintiff was a mere conclusion of the pleader, and that it should have been alleged how, when, and where the offer was accepted. We think that the allegations of the defendant as to the time, place, and circumstances under which the alleged offer was made, which antecede the statement that the offer was accepted, conclusively raise the- • inference that the acceptance was at the same time and place and
Exception is taken to the allowance of an amendment to the defendant’s answer, which was offered for the purpose of obtaining the opening and conclusion-, and to the court’s allowing the defendant the opening and conclusion; the plaintiff contending that he was entitled to this important and valuable privilege. We find no error in the ruling of the trial judge upon this point. It is insisted that the statement of the amendment was not broad enough to constitute a full admission of liability, so as to entitle the defendant to the opening and conclusion. It must be borne in mind that the plaintiff’s petition only asked for an injunction against the defendant, for the appointment of a receiver, and for a dissolution of the partnership. The defendant admitted “that unless he sustains the allegations of his answer in the nature of a cross-bill, beginning with paragraph 15 thereof and ending with the end of said original answer, that plaintiff would be entitled to an injunction against this defendant, to a dissolution of said partnership, and to a receivership for the partnership assets and the property involved in the litigation; and he therefore assumes the burden of proving the facts stated in the cross-bill of defendant, to the end that he may obtain specific performance of his contract set out in said cross-bill.” We think this admission was broad enough to entitle the defendant to the opening and conclusion. But aside from the amendment, and if the amendment had never been offered, under the well-settled rule that he who carries the burden of proof ■is entitled to the opening and conclusion it was not error for the court to allow the defendant the opening and conclusion in this case. The affirmative relief sought by the defendant was so wholly inconsistent with the relief sought by the plaintiff, whose allegations of fact were not controverted, that a decree for the plaintiff must necessarily have followed' unless the defendant by affirmative proof had established the contentions set up in his answer in the nature of a cross-bill. The relief sought by the plaintiff dealt with property alleged to be the property of the partnership. The de
Upon the trial of the case there was direct conflict in. the evidence as to the terms of the proposal made by the plaintiff'to the defendant, and a verdict in favor of either of the parties would have been authorized. For this reason the trial judge did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for a new trial, unless there were such errors in the trial as erroneously induced or contributed to cause the finding actually returned by the jury; and for this reason we shall deal with the several grounds of the amend ■ ment to the motion. *
The fourth ground of the motion for new trial excepts to the allowance of the amendment to the defendant’s answer to which we have already referred. The plaintiff preserved exceptions pendente lite- to this point, or else the same could not be considered, because the principle that rulings upon the pleadings are not subject to review in'motions for new trials is hoary with age, and all courts bow to it reverently. Mayor &c. of Dublin v. Dudley, 2 Ga. App. 763 (59 S. E. 84). But this ground of the motion properly excepts to the fact that in the trial the court allowed the defendant to open and conclude, over plaintiff’s objection; and what we have said as to this portion of the, exceptions as preserved pendente lite applies to this portion of the ground of the motion, and need not be repeated.
Exception is taken because the court allowed the witness' Wingate to testify with reference to the contents of a slip of paper as set forth in the statement of facts, and to the admission of the paper itself at a subsequent stage of the trial. It appears from the record that after Wingate had testified at length as to the agreement entered into between Mr. Hall and himself, his attention was called to a slip of paper which he testified was given him by the plaintiff, and upon which were’the words and figures, “New 47,000,
In the sixth ground of the motion for a new trial the correctness of the charge as set forth in the'statement of facts is challenged. It is argued that the judge should not have used the word “contract,” because there was no evidence to support the use of that word, because there was no evidence that the offer of the plaintiff was ever legally accepted by the defendant, because the alleged contract was void under the statute of frauds, because there was no consideration for the contract, because the contract was not performed, because the $69,500 was not paid in cash, and because the alleged agreement was void for want of mutuality. The movant contends that the giving of the charge, which really only submitted the contentions of the defendant, was error, because all questions as to the making of the alleged contract claimed by the defendant should have been eliminated from the case. What has been said in the ruling upon the demurrers applies to the exception to the instruction upon the ground that the alleged contract was void
In the ninth ground of the motion for a new trial the plaintiff complains that in a case of specific performance the court should not have given the instruction which is usual in criminal cases with reference to reasonable doubt, to wit, that the jury should not create in their minds a vague or fanciful doubt as to the contentions
The tenth ground of the motion for a new trial is not well taken. The court charged that the defendant contends that sometime last fall he and the plaintiff had some differences in regard to their partnership business, and that eventually the plaintiff offered to take the amount owing to him by the partnership in settlement for his, the plaintiff’s, interest in the partnership property, and that this much of the contention of the defendant was not disputed by the plaintiff. It is insisted that this instruction was error, because the court omitted to state that the offer was limited to Christmas of the year 1922, as contended by the plaintiff, and because the court said nothing in the instruction to tell the jury that the defendant admitted that nothing was said as to whether the payment was to be in cash or on credit on some later date. This exception is without merit, because the record shows that the court did not state anything that was not undisputed; and it is well settled that a charge which is correct gives-no ground for exception because something else which might also be correct is omitted. Aside from this rule, however, the court, in stating facts about which there is no dispute, is not authorized to enter into a detailed statement of facts in behaíf of either of the parties as to which they differ. If the court had stated, as it is insisted by the plainti fT that he should have done, “that whatever offer he made was limited to Christmas of 1922,” he would have been obliged also to have stated that the defendant contended that he had until January 2, 1924, or until April 3, 1924, to comply with his agreement; and the same thing would be true as to the complaint as to the omission to mention that the plaintiff claimed that the payment was to be in cash, and that the defendant was to assume and pay the amount of the indebtedness to the John Hancock Insurance Co. It is clear that the charge complained of did not necessarily impress the jury with the idea that the court was favorable to the contentions of the defendant, because nothing was stated except what the record shows to be facts upon which the parties iñ their contentions and testimony agree.
The assignment of error contained in the thirteenth ground of the motion for a new trial is without inerit, for the reasons stated in dealing with the first ground of the amended motion. The alleged contract was not void under the statute of frauds, or for any of the other reasons alleged; and even if the plaintiff’s proposal be construed as a continuing parol offer to contract, performance by the defendant accepted by the plaintiff by receiving the check and notes for $70,000 as the purchase-price of the two tracts of timber created a complete contract. It is insisted in this ground of the motion that there was no evidence tliat the plaintiff gave the defendant until the expiration of the partnership on January 2, 1924, to comply with the agreement, and that for that reason the instruction was erroneous. While it is true that the plaintiff swore that his offer was limited to Christmas of the year
In the fourteenth ground of the motion the plaintiff presents the contention that it was er-ror to give the instruction of which complaint is made, because it submitted to the jury whether the defendant would be entitled to a decree for specific performance on the idea that the defendant had complied with the proposed contract, regardless of whether the plaintiff knew or understood at the time he accepted the check and notes that it was intended to be a compliance on the part of the defendant with the terms of the alleged contract. The plaintiff insists that the alleged proposal could not amount to a contract, was never accepted by the defendant, was void under the statute of frauds, and was without consideration. For the reasons hereinbefore stated we can not sustain the contentions last mentioned. While the evidence as to whether Hall knew, at the time he accepted the check and notes, that Wingate intended and understood that the check and notes were being accepted by Hall as a compliance with his original proposal is conflicting, there are sufficient circumstances in the record to authorize the instruction given by the court upon this point, and to warrant the jury in finding that there was no reason why Hall should have forgotten the terms of the proposal to Wingate (if it be true that he made the proposal testified to by Wingate), and sufficient evidence to warrant the jury to find that Hall accepted the check and notes with the knowledge that Wingate at least understood that they were being delivered to him in accordance with and in compliance with the proposal of December 14, 1922, as testified to by Wingate. Civil Code (1910), § 4267.
The charge of which complaint is made in the fifteenth ground, of the motion was not erroneous for any reason assigned. The court charged the jury, in effect, that if there was a valid legal consideration for the promise of Hall to Wingate, the latter as promisee might sustain his action, even though he did not pay the consideration himself, and even if the payment was made by another for him or induced to do so by his efforts. We think this a correct statement of the law. Civil Code (1910), § 4249. Owenby v. Georgia Baptist Assembly, supra.
In view of what we have just said, it was not error
We find no error in the refusal of the court to give the requested instructions embodied in the eighteenth, nineteenth, twen
In the twenty-third ground it is alleged that the verdict is contrary to law, for the reason that specific performance of a voluntary agreement or mere gratuitous promise to convey land will not be decreed; and that it was not claimed in this case that any possession of the land was given under the agreement accompanied by valuable improvements made on the faith of the agreement, nor was it claimed that there was any consideration for the plaintiff’s agreement which could be properly claimed to be meritorious under the Jaw, because whatever time and work the defendant claimed to have expended in making the sale of the timber was time and work which belonged to the firm of Hall & Wingate and not to the defendant himself. The determination of whether the verdict is contrary to law upon this point must depend upon the construction placed upon the evidence by the jury. We do not think that for any reason assigned in this ground the verdict was contrary to law by reason of the fact that the defendant failed to prove a meritorious consideration moving to the plaintiff. In the first place, the movant is in error in alleging that the-evidence showed that the time of the defendant under the contract belonged entirely to Hall & Wingate, and that therefore it should not be taken into account as supplying consideration. There is no phrase in the contract binding Wingate to give his entire time and attention to the business of Hall & Wingate. The evidence is to the effect that Wingate was to conduct the farming operations, but no specific amount of time is indicated or required to be devoted to this duty. Presumably he should be required to give the same attention to the partnership plantation as he would if it were his individual prop
It is insisted that the verdict is wrong, because the alleged contract is unreasonable, unjust, and unconscionable; that it virtually takes from the plaintiff his own property, and imposes upon him a loss which is so outrageous as to shock the moral sense. If this complaint is well founded, the verdict should have been set aside; for while juries are the judges of the testimony and the credibility of the witnesses, they can not render a verdict contrary to law in that the conclusion reached by them is abhorrent to the intrinsic principles of justice and fair play. The plaintiff had invested $4287.50 paid to the owner of the Newell place, and had assumed an obligation of $15,000 loaned by the John Hancock Life Insurance Company. This was the sum total of his original investment. During nearly six years which had elapsed before his proposal to the defendant, he had had the latter’s services at a rate of less than $2 per day, and the latter had cleared 1000 acres of land and had erected 30 tenant-houses on the place, besides other improvements. In making these improvements and in other expenditures incidental to their farming operations the firm of Hall & Wingate had incurred an indebtedness to the plaintiff of many thousand dollars, according to the plaintiff about $53,000, and according to the defendant about $46,000. As a member of the firm of Hall & Wingate the plaintiff was as much liable for the large indebtedness as was the defendant, but as the seller of the supplies there was included in the indebtedness the usual mercantile profits in which the defendant did not share. In other words, naturally the original cost of the goods to the plaintiff was a sum perhaps
The rulings contained in headnotes 17 and 18 require no elaboration.
We find no substantial ground for complaint in the exception to that portion of the decree wherein the defendant was required to pay to the plaintiff within 30 days the sum of $2572.63. The plaintiff claimed that the defendant owed him $3042.63 for supplies furnished subsequently to December 14, 1922. $3042.63