57 Ga. App. 788 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
Lead Opinion
Mrs. Max Loeb sued Harry May for a breach of warranty of the title of a diamond ring bought by her from him. It appears from the petition and the uncontradicted evidence adduced that the plaintiff bought the ring from the defendant for a consideration of $1000 and pawned it to one W. M. Lewis; that as a result of a suit in trover afterwards instituted by P. A. Tatum against Lewis to recover the ring as being the property of Tatum which Tatum alleged had been stolen from him, in which Lewis vouched the plaintiff, Mrs. Loeb, into court, and a verdict and judgment were found for the plaintiff, Tatum, thereby adjudicating the title to the ring in him, the possession of the ring was yielded to Tatum. It was stipulated and agreed on the trial by. counsel for both sides that ‘“the ring belonged to Mr. May at the time it was sold to plaintiff, and while said ring had never belonged to Tatum, as claimed by him, it was the same ring recovered by Tatum in the case of Tatum v. Lewis.” Thus- far it would seem that the plaintiff had failed to establish any breach of warranty against the defendant, and that a verdict and judgment for the defendant were demanded. It is insisted, however, by the plaintiff, that, notwithstanding the ring in truth and in fact belonged to May when he sold it to the plaintiff and was never the property of Tatum, and that the verdict and judgment for Tatum in the suit against Lewis finding the right and title in the ring as being in Tatum did not in fact speak the real truth, the verdict and judgment in that case constituted an adjudication that title to the ring was not in May, and caused the plaintiff to lose the ring, May
It appears from the evidence that after the plaintiff, Mrs. Loeb, had been vouched into court by Lewis, the defendant in the suit by Tatum to recover the ring, she, according to her testimony, called on May and he said to her “Don’t worry; I will call Mr.' Mayer; he is my lawyer and he will tell you what to do;” that May called Mr. Mayer and told him that she would call to see him, that Mr. May stated: “I will call my attorney, Mr. Mayer, and talk to him;” that Mr. May called Mr. Mayer on the telephone and stated to Mrs. Loeb, '•“You go on up and see him and explain it to him;” that she called on Mr. Mayer but never employed him and never paid him any fee; that Mr. May sent her to Mr. Mayer as Mr. May’s attorney. It appears that afterwards Mr. Mayer appeared at the trial of the case of Tatum against Lewis, took part in the examination of witnesses and made an argument in the case, and afterwards argued the motion for new trial in that case made by the defendant Lewis. Mr. Mayer testified that while he was present at the trial of the case of Tatum against Lewis he was not an attorney of record and was not employed by Mr. May to represent him in that case; that Mr. May never discussed employment with him to represent him in that case, but that Mr. Mayer discussed the facts of the ease with Mr. May quite fully prior to the trial of the case; that Mrs. Loeb came to his office some time in 1934, and stated she had come after Mr. May had telephoned about a bail-trover suit against Mr. Lewis by Dr. Tatum; that she
It further appears from the evidence that Mr. May testified that after the case of Tatum against Lewis was filed, Mrs. Loeb called on him and told him about the case and asked him what she should do; that he told her to see an attorney, and in response to her questions as to what attorney he would suggest, he told her to see Mr. Mayer. Mr. May testified that he did not employ Mr. Mayer, and did not authorize anybody to employ him to act for him on the trial of the suit of Tatum against Lewis, and has not paid Mr. Mayer any fee; that he did not employ counsel to represent him, and was not asked by anybody to employ counsel to represent him in the trial of that case. Mr. May further testified that in testifying in the case of Tatum against Lewis he stated that he was merely a witness in that case, and had nothing else to do with the case; that the plaintiff, Mrs. Loeb, never asked him to come into court in any capacity except as a witness. There is evidence that Mr. May paid a portion of the costs of copying the record in the case of Tatum against Lewis, and that Mr. May did this at the request of Mr. Mayer. It appears inferentially that counsel other than Mr. Mayer appeared for the defendant on the trial of Tatum against Lewis. The judge of the municipal court, who tried the case without the intervention of a jury, found in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant’s motion for new trial, on the general grounds, was overruled, and he excepted.
A person who is vouched into court, in a suit pending by a defendant having a remedy over against him, and who is therefore bound by a judgment rendered against the defendant to the extent
“Where a defendant may have a remedy over against another, and vouches him into court by giving notice of the pendency of the suit, the judgment rendered therein shall be conclusive upon the party vouched, as to the amount and right of the plaintiff to recover.” Code, § 38-624. Only a person against whom a defendant has a remedy over is, as a vouchee, bound by the judgment which may be rendered against the defendant. The defendant in the- case in which it is contended May was vouched into court was not Mrs. Loeb, the present plaintiff, but was Lewis the defendant in the case of Tatum against Lewis. Lewis, to whom Mrs. Loeb had pawned the ring, may have had a remedy over against her in the event of a judgment against Lewis in the trover suit instituted against him by Tatum. Lewis had no remedy over against May as May had not warranted the title to the ring to Lewis. May had only warranted the title to the ring to Mrs. Loeb. “In a sale of personal property the warranty is not negotiable or assignable, and does not run with the article sold.” Smith v. Williams, 117 Ga. 782 (45 S. E. 394, 97 Am. St. R. 220); Young v. Certainteed Products Corporation, 35 Ga. App. 419 (133 S. E. 279). The judgment by which it is sought to hold May as the vouchee into
Decisions which hold that where a person not a party to the record appears and defends a suit he is bound by the judgment, are of cases in which the party so held bound was a person subject to being vouched into court by the defendant who had a remedy over against him, or was a person .who was actually made a party defendant by order of court, or who in the protection of some interest or right of his own actually appeared to all intents and purposes as a defendant, and conducted the litigation. The rule is stated in 34 C. J. 1006, as follows: “A person who is not made a defendant of record and is not in privity with a party to the action may, as a general rule, subject himself to be concluded by the result of the litigation if he openly and actively, and in respect to some interest of his own, assumes and manages the defense of the action, although there is authority to the contrary. But to bring about this result it is necessary that the person so intervening should do so for the assertion or protection of some interest or right of his own, or to escape some ultimate liability on his own part; that he should defend the action openly and avowedly and with notice to the adverse party; and that he should be practically substituted for defendant in the management and control of the case, as it is not sufficient to bind him that he merely
As Lewis had no remedy over against May, a judgment against Lewis in that case could not in any manner bind May in a subsequent suit against him by Mrs. Loeb, unless May appeared at the trial of that case or conducted the defense :and, by reason of such conduct or by some other act, rendered himself bound in some manner by the judgment afterwards rendered against the defendant in that case. May was not a party of record in the case of Tatum against Lewis. If May contributed at all to the defense in Tatum against Lewis, he, construing the testimony most strongly against him, and giving Mrs. Loeb the benefit of all deductions from the testimony, did no more than procure his attorney, Mr. Mayer, to represent Mrs. Loeb, the vouchee, in that case. She testified that when she called on Mr. May after she had been vouched into court in the case of Tatum against Lewis, and acquainted him with the pendency of the suit, he sent her to his attorney, Mr. Mayer, stating to her that Mr. Mayer was Mr. May’s lawyer and that Mr. Mayer would tell her what to do; that she accordingly called on Mr. Mayer and stated the case; that she did not employ Mr. Mayer and has paid him no fee. Mr. Mayer after-wards appeared in the case as attorney and conducted the defense. It is only by deductions made from circumstances appearing in the evidence that May appeared in person or through his attorney on the trial of the case of Tatum against Lewis and took any part for the defense in the trial of that case. While Mrs. Loeb testified positively that she did not employ Mr. Mayer as her attorney to represent her in that case, both Mr. May and Mr. Mayer testified positively that Mr. Mayer was not employed or engaged by Mr. May to represent him as his attorney on the trial of that case.
The circumstances, relied on to authorize an inference that Mr. Mayer appeared as Mr. May’s attorney and as representing him on the trial, are that Mr. May called Mr. Mayer over the telephone, referred Mrs. Loeb’s case to Mr. Mayer, sent Mrs. Loeb to him as Mr. May’s attorney; that Mr. Mayer consulted about the case with Mr. May, and afterwards appeared for the defense in the ease, examined witnesses and made argument; that Mr. May afterwards, at the suggestion of Mr. Mayer, paid part of the cost of reporting the testimony; and that Mr. Mayer when in New York made an investigation at Tiffany’s with respect to the title to the ring, and other circumstances. These facts are equally consistent with the theory that Mr. May did not employ Mr. Mayer as his attorney to represent him on the trial of that ease, but that Mr. Mayer represented Mrs. Loeh in that case at the suggestion and instigation of Mr. May, as with the theory that Mr. Mayer represented Mr. May. “When a plaintiff’s right to recover depended upon the establishment of a particular fact, and the only proof offered for this purpose was circumstantial evidence from which the existence of such fact might be inferred, but which did not demand a finding to that effect, a recovery by the plaintiff was not lawful, when, by the positive and uncontradicted testimony of unimpeaehed witnesses, which was perfectly consistent with the circumstantial evidence relied on by the plaintiff, it was affirmatively shown that no such fact existed.” Frazier v. Georgia Railroad &c. Co., 108 Ga. 807 (33 S. E. 996). Both Mr. May and Mr. Mayer appeared as unimpeached witnesses. The positive and uncontradicted testimony of both Mr. May and Mr. Mayer that Mr. May did not employ Mr. Mayer to represent him on the trial of the case of Tatum against Lewis, and that therefore Mr. Mayer, in conducting the defense in that case, did not do so as Mr. May’s attorney, establishes conclusively and without contradiction from the evidence that Mr. May made no appearance either personally or by his attorney on the trial of the case of Tatum against Lewis, and did not participate therein, and is therefore not bound in any manner by the judgment rendered in that case against the defendant on the ground that Mr. May appeared on the trial and participated therein.
Judgment reversed,.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The controlling point in the present case is whether the verdict and judgment in the trover case of Tatum v. Lewis, finding the title to the diamond ring to be in Tatum and thereby causing Mrs. Loeb to lose the ring, are binding on the defendant May. If May was vouched into court or appeared in person or by attorney and took part in defending the case, then that verdict and judgment would be binding on him and would establish the plaintiff’s right to recover in the present case for a breach of warranty.
When a person is sued for breach of warranty for the sale of personal property, such person has the right to vouch his vendor into court to defend the title to the property in question. Code, §§ 38-621, 29-306. The vouchee is bound by the judgment in such case. The vendor of personal property impliedly warrants the title thereto (Code, § 96-301), and this warranty runs from the grantor to the grantee, and does not run with the article sold. When Mrs. Loeb was vouched into court by Lewis in the trover suit by Tatum for the ring, she was placed in a position to be concluded by whatever judgment that might be rendered in such proceeding. May had sold the same ring to her, and the law says he impliedly warranted the title thereto to her, just as- she had to Lewis. Lewis vouched her into court to defend her warranty of the ring to him, and when this was done I think she likewise had the right to vouch May in to defend his warranty of the ring to her. I know of no rule of law that prohibits this being done. Indeed, such is the very purpose of the law that provides that a defendant may vouch his vendor into court, that is, to avoid a multiplicity of suits where litigation over the same subject-matter can be determined and adjusted in one proceeding.
The next question is, was May vouched into court or did he appear in person or by attorney to defend or take part in the trover