59 Ga. App. 444 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
B. L. Howell brought suit against H. C. Jackson to recover an alleged balance of $366.31 for certain timber sold under a written contract, for interest, attorney’s fees, and expenses of litigation. It was alleged that on September 13, 1937, the parties entered into a written contract, a copy of which was set out in substance in the petition and which provided for the sale by Howell to Jackson of all the merchantable pine timber located, on a certain tract of land, containing 269 acres, more or less, purchased by the plaintiff from the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Compan)', to be paid for by Jackson when cut at $2 per thousand board feet for boards 1x4, and $4 per thousand board feet for boards 1x6 and up, “to be paid by said party of the second part [Jackson] $400 on demand and $400 Oct. 15, 1937, both of said payments to be made to the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia, Penn., through their office at Macon, Georgia, and the remainder to be paid when all the lumber has been delivered and counted at the plainer [planer] of said party of the second part at Washington, Ga.” The contract provided that Jackson was to have eighteen months in which to cut and remove the timber, and that “Said
The defendant filed a plea in abatement on the ground that all of the purchase-price was payable to the insurance company and that, therefore, the plaintiff was not entitled to bring the action. He also filed an answer denying that he was indebted in any sum, and that the original contract was not assented to by the insurance company, was rescinded by him and the plaintiff, and a new agreement entered into orally whereby he was to pay the plaintiff $600 for the timber, such amount to be paid to the insurance company, that the plaintiff agreed to pay $300 to the company, and that this Avas for the purpose of obtaining the consent of the company to the release of the timber, that the amount of $600 Avas in fact paid by him on November 17, 1937, AA'hen he was presented Avith a draft for that amount from the company, aaTlo held a security deed from the plaintiff to secure the balance of the indebtedness of the land purchased by the plaintiff. The case was submitted to the jury on the plea in abatement and on the merits, with instructions to return separate verdicts. The jury returned a verdict against the plea in abatement, and returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $366.31, but without any amount for the expenses of litigation. The exception is to the judgment overruling the defendant’s motion for neAV trial.
Clearly the plaintiff, notwithstanding that the insurance company held a security deed to the land in question, was the true owner thereof, and, under previous decisions of this court and the Supreme Court, was entitled to cut timber from the land unless the security of the grantee was thereby impaired. It appears from the record that the insurance company, by providing the amount to which the indebtedness of the plaintiff should be reduced before any timber could be cut, had itself fixed its margin of safety. Accordingly, it insisted on receiving such an amount as would reduce the indebtedness of $1800 to $900. It received this amount, $300 from the plaintiff and $600 from the defendant, and the indebtedness being thereby reduced to $900 the plaintiff was at liberty to cut the timber and sell it to the defendant. The act of incorporating in the release a provision that all of the proceeds from the timber were to be paid the insurance company was without force and effect, was unauthorized, and bound nobody, because the minute the company received $900 its consent was not needed, and it could not, while giving its consent in connection with drawing a draft for the $600, impose any obligations on Jackson or the plaintiff Howell. The true owner was the only party entitled to deal with the timber when the company was paid $900, and all sums due by Jackson under the contract as amended were payable to and belonged to the plaintiff thereafter. It is insisted by the
The first special ground of the motion for new trial, complaining that the verdict and judgment on the plea in abatement were not authorized under the evidence, is controlled adversely to the plaintiff in error by the ruling in the first division of the opinion.
The second and third special grounds oE the motion complain that the court erred in admitting in evidence two letters from the insurance company to the plaintiff, it being contended that the matters between them therein referred to were not binding on the defendant. The record shows that they were admitted only for the purpose of explaining the conduct of the plaintiff in dealing with the defendant, and the court made a notation as to these particular grounds that they were approved only to the extent named. From the stenographer’s transcript included as a part of the record it appears that counsel for plaintiff in error acquiesced in the direction given by the court as to the purpose for which the letters were admitted in evidence, and no merit is shown in these grounds.
The fourth and fifth special grounds complain o£ certain portions of the charge of the court, as to which it is contended that the court misstated the contentions oE the parties in such a way as to be harmful to the defendant. These contentions were stated as being those of the plaintiff only, and under the pleadings and the evidence were substantially correct and not error for any reason assigned. Furthermore, the court instructed the jury that they would have the pleadings out with them for reference in determining the issues involved in the case.
The charge of the court that “I charge you that if there was an agreement between Mr. Jackson and Mr. Howell under and by virtue of which Mr. Howell was to pay the sum of $300 to the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company and that he did pay it, that the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company received it as a part and parcel of this contract, why in that event I charge you that the plea in abatement would not be good, and it would be your duty to re
The seventh special ground complains of the addition by the court of the following language, “That is a question for you to determine under the evidence,” to a requested charge, “If Mr. Howell, the plaintiff, and Mr. Jackson, the defendant, entered into a contract which to be effective must be approved by the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, and if that company refused to approve the contract and the parties then entered into a new contract, which was approved by the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, I charge' you that the last contract would be the binding contract and not the first one,” it being contended that it was confusing to the jury and gave them to understand that they might determine which of the contracts was the binding and effective contract. It was the contention of the plaintiff that the contract between himself and the defendant was the written agreement modified in respect to the amount to be paid by the defendant to the insurance company, the defendant contending that the original contract was rescinded and a new one entered into whereby he was to pay only $600 for all of the timber, without reference to the quantity cut. Certainly it was within the province of the jury to determine the questions referred to by the court. The jury was not being instructed to determine the law applicable to facts at issue, but to determine what were the facts as to which the court stated the law that would apply.
Judgment affirmed.