40 Ga. App. 532 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
Fred Hawkins sued Clyde Haynes upon a promissory note for $250. Haynes pleaded that a horse worth $50, $35 in cash, and the $250 note sued on were given to the plaintiff for two mules; that the mules were not fitted for the purpose intended; that the plaintiff “guaranteed said mules to be straight and sound in every way;” that the next morning after the purchase of the mules they were sick and that one of them died in five days and the other in seven days. Defendant prayed for judgment for the $85 he had paid the plaintiff. Plaintiff demurred to defendant’s answer, and the demurrer was overruled. Plaintiff excepted pendente lite to the overruling of his demurrer. The defendant admitted the execution of the note and assumed the burden of proof.
The substance of the plaintiff’s contentions is that the note provided that the purchaser “take all risk of said mules dying;” that “parol evidence is not admissible to vary the terms of a written contract,” and that an implied warranty “does not operate where the parties by their contract have expressly agreed upon a different warranty.”
The defendant proved the allegations of Ms plea, viz., that the mules were not fitted for the purpose intended, that they were sick the next morning after the purchase, and that they died, one in five days and the other in seven daj^s after their purchase, and that the plaintiff “guaranteed the mules sound and all right.” In fact, the person who sold the mules to the defendant and who is admittedly the alter ego of the plaintiff testified that he “guaranteed the mules to be sound and all right in every way.” The note sued on contained no express warranty, and the plaintiff retained title to the mules until payment of the note. The judge charged the jury in part as follows: “The defendant contends that the mules were warranted to him to be sound and all right. Plaintiff contends that in the contract of sale there was a stipulation that defendant took the risk of the mules dying. I charge you that if he [the defendant] entered into a contract of that kind in signing the note, that he took the risk of the mules dj'ing, and if you believe that it was given for the purchase-money of the mules, and he entered into a written contract with the plaintiff to that effect, then he would be bound by that contract; and I charge you that if one or both of the mules died from any disease contracted after the time of the purchase of them, after the signing of the note, then the defendant, Mr. Haynes, could not avail himself of that defense, and it would be your duty to find for the plaintiff the entire amount for wMch he sues in this ease, as heretofore instructed by the court. I further charge you that if one of the mules or both of the mules died from some disease they had, or already had contracted at the time of the sale, then .the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover
The contention of the plaintiff that there was no evidence that the mules had any disease at the time they were purchased by the defendant is not borne out by the record. The fact that the plaintiff had received these mules in a shipment with other mules just three or four days before he sold them to the defendant, that both mules got sick, that they were sick the very next morning after tbeir purchase, and that “they were never able to work the next day or any other time after” the defendant got them, were all circumstances from which the jury could conclude that the mules had contracted the disease at or before the time of the sale.
The 8th special ground of the motion for a new trial complains that the court charged the jury that if they found for the defendant the form of their verdict should be, “We, the jury, find for the defendant so many dollars with cost of suit.” This is alleged to be error for the reason that the defendant introduced no evidence to show that he had paid the plaintiff anything. The very fact that the jury did not award the defendant the $85 which he alleged in his plea he had paid the plaintiff, or any part thereof, shows that this instruction of the court was harmless to the plaintiff, and therefore furnishes no cause for a new trial. Upshaw v. Stephens, 26 Ga. App. 284 (4) (106 S. E. 125).
Those grounds of the motion for a new trial not covered by the foregoing are without merit. The evidence authorized the verdict, no reversible error of law is shown, and the court properly overruled, "the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.