159 Ga. 1 | Ga. | 1924
Oliver-McDonald Company sued Swift & Company and alleged that the plaintiff purchased of the defendant 75 tons of commercial fertilizer at the price of $42.75 per ton, a total purchase-price of $3207.75; that the fertilizer purchased was registered with the Commissioner of Agriculture, with a stated guaranteed analysis and of a stated commercial value; that the fertilizer so purchased was contained and shipped to plaintiff in bags or sacks having stamped on them the guaranteed analysis; that the actual analysis and actual commercial value of the fertilizer, as found and determined by an official analysis of the same made by the State Chemist, and recorded in a file in the office .of the Commissioner of Agriculture, were lower than the guaran
The defendant demurred to the petition, on several grounds. Certain of these grounds were sustained, and the others overruled. The demurrant excepted pendente lite to the refusal of the court to sustain those grounds of demurrer which were overruled. The case proceeded to trial. Both sides- introduced evidence, at the conclusion of which the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for $20.50. The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and it excepted. The defendant filed a cross-bill of exceptions assigning error upon the exceptions- pendente lite.
The court properly overruled the motion for new trial in this ease. Under the evidence submitted by both sides, a verdict for the defendant should have been entered; but since the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for a small amount .and the defendant was satisfied therewith, the plaintiff, having recovered more than it was actually entitled to recover, can not complain and is not entitled to a new trial.
In its declaration the plaintiff alleged that it “purchased” of the defendant a stated amount of commercial fertilizer of a certain brand and at a stated price, and sought to recover of the vendor the damages and penalties under the provisions of §§ 1778(b) and 1778(c) of the Civil Code, payable to the purchaser’ of fertilizer where its value falls below the guaranteed commercial value and is deficient in the guaranteed ingredients. But a suit for recovery, against the vendor of fertilizers, of the damages and penalties pro
From the evidence of the president of the plaintiff company it appears that the fertilizer in question was shipped to J. A. McDonald under certain orders sent to Swift & Company, signed by Oliver-McDonald Compairy, which read'as follows: “Ship under terms of our contract with you the following” (so many bags of. guano). Deferring to these orders the president of the plaintiff company testified: “I signed this order addressed to
From the undisputed evidence in the case it will be clearly seen that the Oliver-McDonald Company was the agent of the vendor in the sale of the, fertilizers to J. A. McDonald. All that they did was done in accordance with the terms of the contract. And
We axe not called upon here to pass upon the question as to what remedy McDonald might have against either the plaintiff or defendant. We simply hold that the plaintiff could not recover under the facts alleged in the petition and under the evidence. But inasmuch as the court directed a verdict for a small amount in the plaintiff’s favor, it can not be heard to complain. It presented evidence, and so did the defendant. If under this evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything, but the court directed a verdict in its favor for a small amount, a new trial will not be granted upon its motion.
What we have said decides the suit upon its merits, and it is therefore unnecessary to consider or pass upon the exceptions contained in the cross-bill of exceptions.
Judgment affirmed on the main hill of exceptions; cross-hill of exceptions dismissed.