31 Ga. App. 16 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1923
Virginia Baking Company brought suit against the South Georgia Grocery Company on an open account for $501.78, for crackers shipped to the defendant. The, defendant admitted the correctness of the account, and admitted that the crackers for which this account was due were satisfactory, but, by amendment to its answer, alleged that the plaintiff had previously sent to it three shipments of crackers which were wholly worthless, and for which the defendant had paid to the plaintiff $707.28. Defendant pleaded this amount as a set-off, assumed the burden, and contended that the plaintiff was indebted to it for the difference, viz. $205.50. The judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount sued-for, with interest, and entered judgment therefor. The defendant assigns error on the direction of the verdict and the entering of the judgment, and also on the admission in evidence of a certain letter from plaintiff to defendant.
There are three main questions involved: (1) At the time the crackers were received by the defendant company were they of an inferior quality, due to improper manufacture by the plaintiff, or did the alleged damage result from the defendant’s keeping them too long? (2) Did the defendant exercise due diligence in inspecting the crackers and ascertaining any defect therein that may have existed? (3) Did the defendant submit evidence from which the jury could determine what loss, if any, it sustained by virtue of the alleged defective crackers ?
Conceding that under the evidence it was a question.of fact for the jury to determine whether the alleged damage to the crackers was due to improper manufacture by plaintiff, or to being kept too long by defendant, and conceding that there was an issue of fact as to whether the defendant, under all the circumstances, exercised proper diligence in ascertaining the latent defect, if there was' any, in the crackers, still the third point above mentioned is vital to the defense, and the record fails to disclose that the defendant submitted evidence to show the value of the crackers at the time and place of delivery, or even at the time the defect was discovered. Without this the jury could not possibly ascertain whether or how much the defendant was damaged by virtue of the alleged inferior crackers, and without this the defense could not stand, regardless of the other questions raised in the bill of exceptions. The defendant in its amended answer alleged that the crackers were worthless, but it showed by its own testimony that they were not worthless, but were sold for four cents a pound more than a year after they were received by the defendant; and, according to the testimony of both parties, crackers deteriorate with age, and a part of the testimony showed that they would deteriorate in three months. Hence, the value of the crackers more than a year after shipment would be no test of their value at the time and place of delivery. “Where there has been a breach, the measure of damages is ordinarily the difference between the value of the goods ordered and those delivered at the time and place of delivery. . . The rights and liabilities of each are fixed on that day, and subsequent changes in the value of the goods ordered or delivered are wholly imma
The burden was on the defendant to submit sufficient evidence to support Us affirmative defense; and while we base our opinion on its failure to submit evidence from which the jury could determine the value of the crackers at the time and place of delivery, and consequently the damage, if any, sustained, still the evidence for the defense as a whole was indefinite, and in some instances contradictory. For example, the manager of the defendant company testified that he first discovered the defect in these crackers about the first of June, and his own evidence shows that two of the three shipments were not received until June 9 and June 11. Also, in the numerous letters to plaintiff the defendant stated that it had on hand a few boxes of damaged crackers, but after they were sold submitted a claim for 114 boxes. Also, though the crackers were shipped to defendant in March and June, 1920, the plaintiff never received any statement, or even intimation, from defendant showing how many were damaged (other than- “a few boxes”) until July 6, 1921. Also, in correspondence introduced by plaintiff, dating from September 18, 1920, to July 27, 1921, the general attitude of the defendant apparently was that it had some damaged crackers on hand and felt that the plaintiff should relieve it of them because the defendant was a “good customer,” and even stated, “in the event you do not see your way clear to assist us, then we are going to dispose of this lot of loose crackers at whatever amount
The defendant having filed a plea in which it admitted a prima facie case and pleaded a set-off, and having failed to sustain by proof the defense set out in its pleadings, the court did not err in directing a verdict and entering a judgment against it. Tarver v. Park, 20 Ga. App. 87 (92 S. E. 552), and cases cited.
The admission in evidence of the letter of which complaint is made is not reversible error. Even had the case gone to a jury with this letter rejected, the evidence, construed in its most favorable light to the defendant, did not establish its defense. Kent v. Kennett, 11 Ga. App. 176 (74 S. E. 1002).
Judgment affirmed.