15 Ga. App. 620 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
This was a suit in a justice’s court, to recover $85 which the plaintiff had paid in various sums to the defendant company on an account for certain household, furniture. The jury rendered a verdict in her favor, the defendant sued out certiorari, and exception is taken to the judgment overruling the certiorari. The case presents no novel feature, either as to the facts or the law. There are various assignments of error in the petition for certiorari, but in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error the only exceptions insisted upon are that the verdict is contrary to law and to the evidence, and that the jury totally disregarded evidence introduced by the defendant, to the effect that the reasonable value of the use of the furniture purchased by the plaintiff amounted to $80, and that as this evidence was uncontradicted, the jury should not in any event have found a verdict for the plaintiff in excess of $5. The plaintiff in error relies on the general rule stated in the case of Western & Atlantic Railroad Co. v. Beason, 112 Ga. 553 (37 S. E. 863), that “a defense established by the positive and uncontradicted testimony of unimpeached witnesses can not lawfully be arbitrarily disregarded.” It is to be borne in mind that in this statement of the Supreme Court the use of the word “arbitrarily,” to qualify the word disregarded, was not fortuitous. And since it is plain, from the evidence as a whole, that the furniture company in the present case was endeavoring to get both the furniture and the money (a state of facts similar to that disclosed
Judgment affirmed.