13 Ga. App. 453 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The Pine Belt Lumber Company sued Morrison & Harvey on an account for $182.43. The defendants ’admitted the indebtedness, but pleaded that by mistake they had paid the plaintiff $242.26, and prayed to recover the difference between the two 'amounts. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants for $59.83. The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled.
Under this evidence it is clear that the verdict in favor of the defendants was authorized. Money paid under a-mistake of fact or in ignorance of facts may be recovered back, if the circumstances are such that the party receiving ought not in equity and good conscience to retain it. Camp v. Phillips, 49 Ga. 456. Certainly there is nothing in the evidence which would render it inequitable for the defendants to recover this money. The plaintiff has lost nothing by the payment of the money, and will be in no worse position after the mistake is corrected than it was before. One of the witnesses testified that if it had not been misled by the payment, the plaintiff might have collected its indebtedness from the Pannabaker Lumber Company. But, according to evidence which the jury had a right to believe, the Pannabaker Lumber Company did not owe the plaintiff any money at the time the defendants paid it the $242.66 by mistake. Besides, shortly after the sale of the lumber and before the mistake in payment was made, the defendants distinctly notified the plaintiff that they were not responsible for the debts of the Pannabaker Lumber Company. From their making the payment the plaintiff would have had a fight to assume that the defendants had agreed to pay this particular debt, were it not for the fact that the plaintiff had already been paid for this car of lumber by the Pannabaker Lumber Company. At least the jury could so find. Under the evidence for the defendants, the plainest principles of justice would require that the money be paid baefc.
Judgment affirmed.