In 1908 the plaintiff, the Cherokee Graphite & Chemical Company, delivered to the defendant, the Central of Georgia Railway Company, at Atlanta, a car of graphite for shipment to T. S. Heyward & Company, Savannah. According to the plaintiff’s allegations, the car was never delivered to Heyward &
It .is, of course, well settled that strict rules of technical pleadings do not apply in justices’ courts, and that in case of doubt or ambiguity the doubt shall be resolved in favor of the jurisdiction of the court. Since a justice’s court is without jurisdiction in actions ex delicto, except “in cases of injuries or damages to personal property when the principal sum does not exceed one hundred dollars” (Civil Code, § 6534), preference will be given, where it can properly be done, to that construction which will sustain the suit as an action ex contractu. In this view of the matter, the jurisdiction of a justice’s court to consider actions of similar character to that involved here has sometimes been upheld where there had been a sale and an action could be had by waiving the tort and suing as in an action for money had and received. In the present case it is plain that the action is one ex delicto, for it is not distinctly alleged that the carrier breached its contractual duty to deliver the shipment, or that the goods were lost or destroyed in transit. On the contrary, it is plainly apparent from the facts stated in connection with the summons that the carrier was guilty of a tort, because it is expressly alleged that it delivered the shipment, without the knowledge or consent of the consignee, to an entirely different person, to wit, the Electric Fertilizer Company. The case falls clearly under the rulings of this court in Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Goodwin, 1 Ga. App. 351 (57 S. E. 1070), and Georgia &c. Ry. Co. v. Blish Milling Co., 15 Ga. App. 143 (83 S. E. 784). In Jenlcins v. Seaboard Air-Line Railway, 3 Ga. App. 381 (59 S. E. 1120), the action was construed to be one ex contractu, and not ex delicto, and the justice’s court held to have jurisdiction to consider a suit for the value of 39 crates of beans solely upon the ground that the case rested on deterioration, caused by delay
