91 Ga. 745 | Ga. | 1893
“Singer Manufacturing Company, to B. D. Armstrong,
“To amount due as manager of its office in Macon for the months January, February and March, 1891, $3,000.00.”
At the trial the plaintiff’ amended his declaration “ by substituting for the bill of particulars ” the following ;
“To amount due as per agreement for services at the Macon office from January 28 to April 1st, 1891, at the rate of 25 per week and 5 per cent, commission upon*746 all amounts remitted by the Macon office- to the Richmond office, to 9 week at 25, $225.00.”
The above was followed by an itemized list of remittances from January 31st to March 28th,1891, amounting to $3,645.76, with a charge thereon of commissions at 5 per cent., amounting to $182.28, which, added to the $225.00, made the total bill amount to $407.28. The jury found for the plaintiff $364.54, and defendant filed a motion for a new trial, containing several grounds. In the view we take of the case, it is necessary to deal with only one of them, it being that in which the defendant assigned as error the allowance, over its objection, of the amendment above mentioned, the objection being that the amendment set forth a new and distinct cause of action. Even under the extremely liberal rule as to amendments which prevails in this State, it would, in any view of the case, he going to the utmost length to allow this particular amendment. It will be observed that the two accounts differ widely in many respects. The first is for services as manager, and the second for services of a kind not specified, except as to the matter of making remittances, and it is not alleged that these services were within the scope of a manager’s duties. The first account covers the months of January, February and March, 1891; the second covers the period from January 28th to April 1st, 1891. The first account does not show whether it was based upon an express or an implied contract; the second appears to have been based upon an express contract. The first account is for a •stated salary of $3,000.00 for a period covering three calendar months, and containing no hint of any commissions upon remittances, while the second includes a weekly salary of $25.00 for nine weeks, and commissions upon various remittances purporting to have been made during the time above indicated.
In view of the discrepancies appearing upon the face
Another fact, however, appears, which relieves us of all difficulty in holding that the amendment in question should certainly not have been allowed in the present case. It is obvious that the original hill of particulars was for a cause of action covering either the whole or the balance of an amount, due to the plaintiff as manager of the defendant’s office in Macon. The amendment was not offered until it had appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff himself that the contract between the company and himself as manager had been fully complied with, and that if the company owed him anything at all, it was upon a subsequent contract by the terms of which he was employed, not as manager, but to instruct and assist his successor in the office of manager, so that the latter might become familiar with the duties of his position. It is true that the two contracts, according to the evidence, were identical in terms as to the rate of compensation to be allowed the plaintiff; but it is obvious and beyond question that they were in fact separate and distinct undertakings, and consequently the breach of one would necessarily be a dif