70 Ga. 578 | Ga. | 1883
John D. Bagwell instituted suit upon a promissory note, payable to J. D. Bagwell & Co. or bearer, for one hundred and fifteen dollars, bearing date 25th February, 1876, due the first day of November then next, with ten per cent, interest from date, and signed by W. 0. Williams, W. W. Findley and E. W. Merritt.
The suit was in the statutory form against all three of the makers; Merritt and Findley alone were served, the declaration stating that Williams’ “ place of residence was unknown ” to the plaintiff. No copy of the note was appended. There was no return of non est inventus as to Williams, and no order taken to proceed against the other defendants. Findley filed no defence, and at the trial term, judgment was awarded against him and signed by the presiding judge without the intervention of a jury.
The other ground taken against the admission of the note in evidence, was equally unavailing. If good at all, .it was good in abatement of the suit, and should have been made, if it appeared on the face of the pleadings, by demurrer to the suit, either at the first term of the court or as soon thereafter as it existed, and if not taken by demurrer, then it should have been insisted upon by plea in abatement. Merritt’s conduct at the hearing, was certainly a waiver of the objection. It is claimed now that
The court charged the jury, under the facts in pi’oof, that although the wagon was left in the possession of Bag-well, the title to it had passed out of him, and after the title had so passed out of him, he had no right to retain it, although he may have then received notice of Findley’s fraud on Merritt; and refused to charge, at request of Merritt’s counsel, that “ if Bagwell had notice of the fraud before he delivered the wagon, he could only recover from Merritt such part of the note as went to the consideration of the wagon already delivered” ; or that, “ if Bag-well had notice of the fraud before he delivered the wagon, it was Bagwell’s right, if he was not satisfied with the note without Merritt’s signature, to rescind the trade and hold the wagon until a satisfactory note was given ”; and lastly, that “ if Pollard purchased from Findley and Williams while the wagon was in Bagwell’s possession, he purchased subject to Bagwell’s rights.”
Under the charge and the evidence, the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount of the note.
It is not pretended that Bagwell had any agency in procuring Merritt’s signature to this note, or that he was in any manner privy to the fraud by which it was procured ; indeed, the very reverse of this is fairly inferable, not only from the pleadings, but the proof in the case, and Bagwell swears positively that he knew nothing of it until he received notice of it from Merritt, after the trade had been consummated between himself and Williams and Findley. This court has placed a construction upon Code,
In view of these facts, the court could not have charged, as requested, that, “if Pollard purchased from Findley and Williams while the wagon was in possession of Bagwell,
The evidence in this case leaves it doubtful when Pollard became the purchaser of this wagon. If he purchased before Merritt gave notice of the fraud in the procurement of the note, then his title was protected; or, if he purchased before he had any notice at all of any infirmity in Findley and Williams’ title to the property, then, as between him and Bagwell, his title might or might not, according to circumstances, have been valid, and Bagwell, without more, may have been obliged to deliver the wagon to him. In this view of the case, the record in Mrs. Pollard’s suit vs. Prior et al., when taken in connection with the other testimony bearing upon the subject of that suit, may, by a possibility, have been admissible. But whether admissible or not, it could only bear upon an issue raised by Merritt himself, which, as we have seen, was not properly in the case between him and Bagwell. It did no hurt and could have had no possible influence upon the finding in the case. It was immaterial, and affords no reason for a new trial, even if its admission was error.
What has gone before, together with the usual grounds, constitute the entire motion for a new trial. The verdict was not only authorized, but imperatively demanded by the evidence in the case, and the new trial was, therefore, properly refused.
(1.) Because the record showed that W. 0. Williams, one of the joint defendants, was not served, and there was no return by the sheriff of non est inventus, as to him.
(2.) Because the record showed that, before the verdict
This motion can be sustained only for such defects appearing on the face of the pleadings as are not amendable. Code, §3587. The pleadings must be so defective that no legal judgment can be rendered, Ib., §3589. But a judgment cannot be arrested for any defect in the pleadings or record that is aided by verdict, or is amendable as matter of form, Ib., §3590.
These grounds of the motion in arrest have already been, to some extent, anticipated, the last more largely than the first.
The non-joinder or misjoinder of defendants is matter .for a dilatory plea or plea in abatement, and must be taken advantage of at the first term of the court. (Code, §3456; 27 Ga., 113); or if then apparent, by demurrer. Former recovery or pendency of another suit for the same cause of action and between the same parties, is matter in abatement, and must be taken advantage of at the first term, or if occurring afterwards, in the progress of trial, so soon as may be, after it occurs. Code, §3476; 51 Ga., 232; 59 Ga., 175, 176; 57 Ib., 63; 39 Ib., 556; 45 Ib., 158; 53 Ib., 451; 55 Ib., 229; 35 Ib., 66 et seq.
Judgment affirmed.