119 Ga. 983 | Ga. | 1904
The Waycross Air-Line Railroad Company brought a petition for injunction against the Offerman and Western Railroad Company, to prevent the defendant company from constructing its road across the right of way and tracks of the petitioner near Nicholls, Ga., under condemnation proceedings or otherwise, for the purpose of reaching a depot site at or near Nicholls. The injunction prayed for was, at an interlocutory hearing, refused, and the petitioner sued out a writ of error to this court, and, to obtain a restraining order preserving the status until the judgment refusing the injunction could be reviewed, gave a supersedeas bond with sureties, conditioned to pay, in the event the judgment should be affirmed by the Supreme Court, the Offerman and Western Railroad Company all damages resulting from the supersedeas of the judgment and the delay occasioned by bringing the case ,to this court. The judgment of the lower court was affirmed by this court. Waycross R. Co. v. Offerman R. Co., 109 Ga. 827. Subsequently the Offerman and Western Railroad Company brought suit upon this bond against the principal and sureties thereon, for damages which it alleged it had sustained in consequence of the supersedeas and the delay occasioned by suing out the writ of error to the Supreme Court. The defendants demurred to the petition in the damage suit, the demurrer was overruled, and. the judgment overruling the demurrer, upon a review thereof, was affirmed by the Supreme Court. Waycross R. Co. v. Offerman R. Co., 114 Ga. 727. The case was referred to an auditor in the superior court, who found in favor of the plaintiff for a designated amount. The defendants filed certain exceptions of law and certain exceptions of fact to the auditor’s report. The case came on for trial in the superior court upon the report of the auditor and these exceptions. A jury was empaneled to try the issues of fact, and, after the evidence was all in and both sides had announced closed, the judge passed an order overruling the exceptions of law. “ Counsel for defendants thereupon stated to the court, in open court, that no objection was urged to the correctness of the amount found by the auditor, in the event the plaintiff was entitled to recover at all; and thereupon the court directed the jury to find verdicts in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants upon their five grounds of exception of fact, and a verdict for the plaintiff and against the defendants [for
As the evidence demanded a verdict against each of these exceptions of fact, there was no error in directing the jury to so find. The exceptions of law and fact which were properly before the court having been legally disposed of as above indicated, the evidence demanding a finding in favor of the plaintiff, and, the amount found by the auditor not being in dispute, the judgment making the report of the auditor the judgment of the court naturally and legally followed.
Judgment affirmed.