57 Ga. 314 | Ga. | 1876
This was a suit, brought by the railroad company, against the executors of Turner Clanton, for $6,500 00 of a subscription of $10,000 00 to stock, remaining unpaid by Clanton in his lifetime. The jury found a verdict for the sum sued for, with interest from the date of the last call. The executors moved for a new trial on various grounds set forth in the motion, and the presiding judge granted it on one of the grounds alone, and the company excepted. The question for us is, ought the new trial to have been granted on any ground or for any reason ? The judgment of the court below is the grant of the new trial, and if the judge granted it rightfully for any reason which appears of record, it is a rightful judgment and should be affirmed, though he may have put it upon a wrong ground or may have given a wrong reason for it. And so this court has uniformly held: 46 Georgia Reports, 303, and other cases. There are many grounds set out in the motion, but when analyzed, we think they may be reduced to. five.
We see no authority in the charter whereby the directors 'were empowered so to act. It seems to have been done ultra ■•vires, beyond the authority conferred, and the only trouble in the defense here seems to be, that no stockholder was released from the payment of legally called for installments by this •illegal action of the board of directors, and that such installments can be still collected from them in good money, or at ■least, that they can be made to contribute upon a proper case •made, equally with this defendant; that is, they can be made in equity to make their bad money good, by paying the difference. The testimony, however, goes further, and shows that all the Confederate money thus taken was paid out dollar for dollar. If this payment, dollar for dollar, was upon contracts made at gold rates, then no harm was done, and there would be no loss; but if for work at prices corresponding with the depreciated currency, it is clear that, all other stock
In view of the whole of the facts and the law arising thereon, we will not control the discretion of the presiding judge in granting the new trial.
Judgment affirmed.