9 Ga. App. 310 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Branch sued the Southern Bailway Company, alleging, that he had been agent for the company at Baxley, Ga., and that a shipment of shoes came to that place by freight from A. W. Tedcastle & Co., of Boston, Mass., as shippers, consigned to themselves, “order notify” Mr. F: A. Morris — that is, that the goods were shipped with the bill of lading attached to a draft for $103.50, the price of the goods; that Mr. Morris failed to pay the draft, and, acting on what purported to be instructions from Tedcastle & Co., he, as agent for the railway company, reshipped the goods - to Coggins & Brown, a firm of merchandise brokers in Atlanta; that Tedcastle & Co. afterwards filed a claim for the'value of the goods, insisting that they had not ordered them reshipped; that when this claim was filed with the railroad company the plaintiff was unable to produce the written order of reshipment, and made an agreement with the claim agent of the railroad company that he would pay to the company the value of the goods, and that they might settle with Tedcastle & Co., with the understanding that the company would transfer and deliver to him- the bill of lading and other papers under which title to the goods was held; that he paid the money to the railroad company, but that it refused, over his demands, to transfer to him the bill of lading and other papers by which the title to the shipment was held. The answer of the defendant consisted merely of a denial of the salient features of the plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiff introduced enough evidence to prove his case as laid, and the jury returned a verdict in his favor for the amount that he had paid to the railroad company, with interest. In its motion for a new trial, the railroad company makes a number of assignments of error.
Able counsel for the plaintiff in error are doubtless correct in the proposition that the transaction vested the plaintiff with rights which he could have enforced in equity, just as effectively as he flight have enforced those same rights at law if the formal transfer of the writings had been made to him. But we do not think that this fact, or the fact that the law gave him the right to use the name of the holder of the legal title for the purpose of bringing an action in his favor, in any wise impairs his right to insist that the company’s refusal to transfer the formal title is a breach of the contract. To say that the party is entitled to the one remedy is not to deny that has the other also. For instance, if A. makes a contract with B., calling for a warranty deed to a certain piece of
It may be that the court’ should have instructed the jury more specifically as to the basis upon which they should calculate the damages, instead of charging them generally that they should return in his favor whatever amount they “might think that he was damaged by reason of the failure of the defendant to comply with the contract,” in the event jdiey found in his favor as to the facts, upon which his right to recover was based; but as the jury found
Having carefully gone through the record, we find no reason for granting a new trial. Judgment affirmed.