50 S.E.2d 223 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1948
The plea of the defendant to the action on the note failed to allege a mistake as contemplated by the law, and the court did not err in dismissing the plea and in directing the verdict for the plaintiff.
The defendant filed a plea and answer admitting the execution of the note, that the plaintiff was the owner thereof, and assumed the burden of proof. The answer also alleged: that the parties had conducted a dry-cleaning establishment as partners from August, 1946, until June 20, 1947, on which latter date the defendant purchased the plaintiff's interest in the partnership for $2000, giving the note for that amount for said interest; that the dissolution of the partnership was agreed upon because the plaintiff decided to move with his family to Alabama; that the defendant's wife was the bookkeeper for the partnership, and had not been well for some time, and the books were not up to date; that the defendant obtained the services of a trained bookkeeper to assist him, and they worked on the books until 12 o'clock one night; that although the defendant was not familiar with bookkeeping methods and knew nothing about the books of the business, and the plaintiff knew no more about the books than the *108 defendant, they undertook to figure out what the business had earned, and after working together on the books for several hours they reached the conclusion that the plaintiff's half of the earnings, after deducting the money he had previously drawn, amounted to $2000, and the note was given for that amount with the understanding that this was the amount due the plaintiff from the earnings of the business to June 20, 1947; that upon a thorough check of the records, it appears that the plaintiff and the defendant grossly miscalculated the earnings of the business by using improper methods of calculating the earnings, and by failing to include, through mutual mistake, numerous expenses of the business; that the items not considered or erroneously considered consisted of certain expenditures made by the defendant in August, 1946, in behalf of the business for rent, telephones, supplies, salaries, business license, freight, labor, and money deposited to the credit of the business, amounting to $987.37, also a spotting board and supplies purchased by the defendant personally for the business, amounting to $241; also the use by the defendant of his personal car for the business in 1946, including the gas and oil used in its operation of the value of $120; also a personal payment by the defendant of interest to the Bank of Waynesboro of $157.31; that the parties overlooked accounts owed by the business of $594.53, and failed to allow a depreciation of $609.03 on the cost of fixtures and equipment of the business. The answer then alleged that, upon a proper consideration of the foregoing items, the amount actually due the plaintiff on June 20, 1947 was $388.19, and that before the defendant was able to get the books of the business brought up to date, and before he discovered the mistakes pointed out, he paid to the plaintiff on the note $1000 on August 18, 1947, and had thus actually overpaid the plaintiff in the sum of $611.81, and he prayed for a judgment against the plaintiff in this amount with interest thereon. The answer also alleged that the trade was made hastily because of the desire of the plaintiff to sell and move from the State.
Upon the trial of the case, after a jury had been selected and before any evidence had been introduced, the plaintiff moved orally to dismiss the plea and answer on the ground that it failed to set out any defense to the plaintiff's action, which *109
motion the court sustained. Thereafter the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff and judgment was entered thereon. The defendant excepted to the striking of his answer and to the direction of the verdict.
The defendant relies upon the Code, § 20-308, "If the consideration be founded in mistake of fact or of law, the promise founded thereon can not be enforced," and upon § 37-202, which states that a mistake relievable in equity is some unintentional act, or omission, or error, arising from ignorance, surprise, imposition or misplaced confidence. That section also states that the power to relieve a mistake in equity shall be exercised with caution, and to justify it the evidence shall be clear, unequivocal, and decisive as to the mistake. The defendant also relies on a number of cases. In Herty v. Clark,
"When a defendant, in a court of law, seeks to avoid his contract on the ground of mistake, he must, by his pleadings, allege the grounds of the mistake, as fully as he is required to do in a court of equity to entitle him to relief." Lowery v.Davidson,
The plea shows that many of the items claimed by the defendant as having been overlooked in the making of the sale were expenses that he personally had paid for the partnership, most of which were paid out in 1946, six months or more before the dissolution. The only other items alleged to have *112
been omitted by mutual mistake were accounts owed to the business and a depreciation charge on the cost of fixtures and equipment. We do not think that the overlooking of these accounts and a possible charge for depreciation are such mistakes as the law contemplates, and are sufficient to justify the setting aside of the contract made by the parties. There is no contention that the books were incorrect, or that they contained any error as to any item causing a mistake. Even if the books were not right up to date because of the illness of the defendant's wife who was the regular bookkeeper, it does not appear that an error or mistake was made in any item because it had not been posted on the books. The parties got together with the books before them, after having the aid of a trained bookkeeper the night before, and agreed upon a price for the plaintiff's interest after working on the books for several hours, and no reason appears to us why the courts should strike down the contract made by them. See Bostwick v.Duncan,
We think that the defendant's plea and answer was properly stricken, and the court did not err in directing the verdict for the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed. Sutton, C. J., and Felton, J., concur.