3 Ga. App. 381 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The plaintiff in error instituted an action in the justice’s court to recover $72.50 as damages on account of loss sustained through failure of the defendant to transport a shipment of beans. The case was appealed to the superior court of Chatham county, where the action was dismissed upon the ground that the justice’s court was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter. The bill of exceptions assigns error upon the refusal of the court to allow two amendments to the summons, and also upon the judgment dismissing the suit.
The controlling question in the case is, whether the action as •originally brought was one ex delicto, or ex contractu. It is well .settled that one may waive his action for the tort and sue on the contract. It is likewise beyond dispute that a justice’s court has no jurisdiction of actions ex delicto, except for injury to personal property less than $100. If the action originally brought sounds in contract, the amendment should have been allowed. If the suit should be construed as one in tort, the court correctly disallowed the amendments; because an action ex delicto can not be transformed by amendment into one ex contractu. These principles are axiomatic. The original summons is in the following words: “You are hereby summoned personally or by attorney to be and appear at a justice court of said county and State, to be held at No. 4-20 Bryan St. West, being the place of holding the .justice’s court, for the First District, G. M., in the city of Savannah, county and State aforesaid, on the 1st day of August, 1905, at 10 o’clock A. M. of said day, to answer to complaint entered .against you by C. R. Jenkins, to recover the sum of seventy-two & 50/100 dollars, the value of twenty-nine crates of beans, property of plaintiff, delivered on the 11th day of May, 1905, to defendant, at its station, Meinhardt, Ga., for shipment to Chapin Bros., Boston, Mass., and by defendant accepted, but not delivered to consignee; to the loss and damage of said plaintiff the sum of seventy-two & 50/100 dollars, and — cents, besides interest; a cop3>- of which is hereto annexed; and in case of your refusal or neglect the court
Counsel for plaintiff in error insists that the lower court improperly distinguished between a case where the defendant wrongfully came into possession and refuses to account, and a case where the defendant’s possession has been obtained by consent and agreement and he fails to account. And the ruling in the case of Macon & Birmingham R. Co. v. Walton, 127 Ga. 294 (56 S. E. 419), is relied upon to sustain the contention that the justice’s court had jurisdiction, and therefore, upon appeal, the superior court had jurisdiction. In the Walton case, supra, it was held that “a petition alleging that the defendant company ‘did . . undertake to transport from Lizella, Bibb county, Georgia, to Atlanta, within a reasonable time, a certain car-load of watermelons; . . that said defendant failed to transport said car of melons within a reasonable time, said melons having been delayed three days or more, . . were damaged on account of said delay to the amount of $50.00,’ states a cause of action arising ex contractu.” It will be observed that there is a very slight difference between the wording of the summons in the present case and in the Walton case. In the Walton case the summons specifically alleged that the damages to the melons arose on account of the delay. In the present case the failure to deliver to the consignee in time is alleged to be the reason of the loss and damage. According to the allegations of the Walton case, the watermelons were delivered, but in a damaged condition, due to the delay in the shipment. In the present case the allegation (considering as we must the account attached to the summons, in connection therewith and as a part of it) is practically the same.
If it be admitted that it is ambiguous whether the action in the present case is one 'predicated upon a breach of contract, ' or whether damages are sought for a tort, still, even in that event, the plaintiff had the xight, at his option, to treat it as an action on the contract. The defendant, though it had the right to demur, •could not defeat the right of plaintiff to make this election by
Counsel for defendant in error relies especially upon the rulings in Southern Ry. Co. v. Born Steel Range Co., 122 Ga. 658 (50 S. E. 488), and Cragg v. Arendale, 113 Ga. 182 (38 S. E. 399). Both of these cases, however, are instances where conversion of the property was plainly alleged; and as held by this court-in Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Goodwin, 1 Ga. App. 351 (57 S.
In the present case, according to the allegations of the summons (at least sufficiently for the purposes of a justice’s court), the defendant was rightfully in possession of the beans, — had not converted them to its own use, — but, having been intrusted with them for the purpose of deliverjq had damaged the plaintiff by delay in delivery. So far from delivery being denied, it is rather to be inferred from the statement of the account. We are therefore clear in the opinion that the learned trial judge erred in dismissing plaintiff’s action.
3. Having held that the action is one ex contractu, it necessarily follows that the amendments offered by the plaintiff which amplified the statement of his cause of action should have been allowed. A petition showing a plaintiff and a defendant, and setting out sufficient facts to indicate and specify some particular transaction as a cause of action, is enough to amend by. If the original summons of the plaintiff was not of itself sufficient to meet the requirements as to pleadings in a justice’s court, the amendments offered and refused set out an express written contract to Carry and deliver the goods in question. The receipt evidenced a contract of bailment. A bailment is a delivery of goods upon a contract, express or implied, to carry out the object and dispose of the property in conformity with the purposes of the trust. Civil Code, §3894.
The second amendment offered still more clearly negatived the idea that the action was for a conversion, the amendment offered being as follows: "That said defendant, at the time of the reception of said beans, did not transport and deliver the same within a reasonable time to their place of destination, but so delayed in their transportation that plaintiff was injured and damaged-the difference between the price he should have received, if delivered within a reasonable time, and the price he did receive when actually delivered, to wit, the sum of $73.50.” It was not, as contended by counsel for the defendant, an attempt to set up by amendment a new cause of action. As held by the Supreme Court in City of