8 Ga. App. 81 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1910
This was a suit to recover damages for a breach of contract of carriage, based on the following state of facts. The railroad company issued to the Washington Cotton Company in Wilkes county, Georgia, its bill of lading, reciting that it had received 100 bales of cotton to be transported to Savannah, Georgia, to be delivered to the order of the shippers, notifying, the plaintiffs, Pferdmenges, Preyer & Company. This bill of lading was attached to a draft for the value of the '100 bales of cotton, drawn on the plaintiffs, at Savannah. Before the cotton was received at Savannah, the plaintiffs paid this draft, secured the bill of lading, demanded of the railroad company the 100 bales of cotton, and received only 96 bales. They thereupon sued the railroad company, in the city court of Washington, to recover the value of the 4 bales. It was not clear from the allegations of the petition whether the suit was in tort or for breach of the contract of carriage, and the court, at the instance of the defendant, required an election, and the plaintiffs elected to proceed in tort for a conversion. The evidence did not affirmatively show, any tort in Wilkes county, but did show that the conversion, if anywhere,
Was there any real inconsistency as to the two suits? While a cause of action for a breach of a contract of carriage is legally different from that for a conversion of the goods, and while the two causes of action can not be commingled in the same suit (Civil Code, § 4944), still .there is no inconsistency in the substance of them. Both suits, in a sense, are based on. the contract. If suit is brought against the railroad company for a conversion of goods which it contracted to carry and deliver, and subsequently, it is discovered that there was no conversion; but that the goods were lost or destroyed, there would be no inconsistency in withdrawing the suit and subsequently suing for a breach of the contract in failing to carry and deliver. While one may be compelled to elect whether a particular suit shall proceed as one in tort or in contract, and the facts of that particular suit must abide by the election, it does not follow that the election made in that suit extinguishes all other remedies. The case of Kennedy v. Manry, 6 Ga. App. 816 (66 S. E. 29), and others of like character, relied upon by the plaintiff 'in error, are not in point. In those eases the question was as to avoiding a sale, or affirming the sale and suing for the proceeds. The plaintiff in such a case must either affirm or disaffirm; and when once the option is exercised, it -is binding and conclusive. The doctrine of election is designed to clarify the issue to be tried, and, to accomplish this purpose, it prohibits a'litigant from pursuing more than one remedy in the main suit. But if he selects the wrong remedy and fails, lie is not thereby prevented from pursuing the right remedy to a successful result.