Birmingham Fertilizer Co. v. Dozier

79 S.E. 927, 13 Ga. App. 759, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 350
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 31, 1913
Docket5021, 5022
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 927 (Birmingham Fertilizer Co. v. Dozier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Fertilizer Co. v. Dozier, 79 S.E. 927, 13 Ga. App. 759, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 350 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Russell, J.

'The Birmingham Fertilizer Company brought an action in trover to recover from P. N. J. Dozier 39 promissory notes, described in an exhibit attached to the petition, and alleged to be of the value of $850. The defendant in his answer admitted having in his possession at the time of the service of the suit certain promissory notes of the form described in the plaintiff’s petition, but not all of them. In other words, the defendant contended that some of the notes described in the plaintiff’s petition had been delivered by him to the plaintiff prior to the suit. The defendant [760]*760in his answer contended that those notes which were in his possession did not belong to the plaintiff, and, by way of equitable defense, alleged that by virtúe of a contract between the parties, the notes included his commissions and charges for the sale and handling of the fertilizers, which gave him such an interest in the notes as entitled him to retain possession of them until the commissions were paid. The defendant further pleaded that under the contract between himself and the fertilizer company, after taking into consideration the payments made by him and the notes delivered by him to the plaintiff at its request, the plaintiff was indebted to him in a sum greater than the amount evidenced by the notes in his possession. The verdict was in favor of the defendant; the plaintiff’s motion for new trial was overruled, and exception is taken to that judgment. The defendant, by cross-bill of exceptions, excepts to the judgment striking from his original answer paragraphs 5, 6, and 7, and his prayer “to have his claims against the petitioner offset, and that the plaintiff be mulcted the costs of the court,” and excepts also to the court’s refusal to allow certain amendments to his answer. Since, in view of the result of this case, the ruling upon the defendant’s answer (without regard to its ■ correctness) was harmless, we shall consider only the assignments of error in the main bill of exceptions.

It appears from a review of the record that the verdict was perhaps partly induced by evidence which would have been admissible under the defendant’s answer if the court had not sustained the demurrer to the 5th, 6th, and 7th paragraphs, and had allowed the amendments which he sought to make. Under the ruling in Spence v. State, 7 Ga. App. 825 (68 S. E. 443), if the result reached by the jury would have been the correct conclusion of the case had the judge ruled or charged in accordance'with the contentions of one of the parties to the case, the verdict will not be' set aside merely because the judge erroneously ruled to the contrary, or omitted to give in charge to the jury a principle which should appropriately have been included within his instructions. In other words, if the .result reached would have been the same had the court ruled properly, and if the jury found rightly in spite of judicial error, the finding will not be set aside in order that the same result may be reached by a proceeding free from legal error.

The defendant, in his answer, attempted to set up, in response to [761]*761the petition in trover, that he had received on commission $8,576.36 worth of fertilizer; that he had paid over to the Birmingham Fertilizer Company, on account of his sales, $6,650.73, and had returned to it notes amounting to $1,915.63; and that his commission and storage, by virtue of the terms of the contract between himself as agent and the plaintiff as principal, amounted to nearly $600, -'leaving the plaintiff due him the sum of $542.52. The defendant did not ask- a judgment for this $542.52, but merely insisted that inasmuch as the plaintiff owed him $542.52, he was entitled to the possession of the notes still remaining in his hands, and that as the plaintiff was not entitled to possession, it could not recover these papers in trover. The fact that the jury found for the defendant itself evidences that the jury must have acted upon the evidence which the defendant would have introduced in support of his answer if it had been allowed, and that he received full benefit of his contention, although the plea in which this contention should have been formally presented to the court was stricken.

Having held that the defendant got the benefit of his answer and of the stricken amendments as substantially as if the court had overruled the demurrers which were sustained, the question which arises upon the main bill of exceptions is whether the amendments (the evidence in support of which, no doubt, caused the verdict for the defendant) could properly have been allowed, and whether paragraphs 5, 6, and 7 should have been stricken. We think there is no doubt that the court should not have stricken these paragraphs of the answer; and the amendments offered appear to be merely amplification of the statements in the original answer. The insistence of the plaintiff in error in the main bill of exceptions is that the city court of Blakely is without jurisdiction and can not take cognizance of the equitable rights which the defendant sought to assert. That the city court is without jurisdiction to afford equitable relief is true, but it is one thing to invoke affirmative equitable relief and quite another thing to interpose as a defense a •right, whether founded in law or equity, which will prevent the plaintiff from recovering. The fact that one’s equitable rights will prevent a plaintiff, of whose case as laid the court has jurisdiction, from recovering does not involve the necessity that the court trying the case shall be clothed with equitable jurisdiction. The court may not be able to afford affirmative relief in equity generally, but [762]*762it must be presumed to bear in mind the rights of the parties at issue, and for this reason may deal with any matter of which the court has jurisdiction, whether such rights depend for their existence upon law or equity, which may affect the cause in question. For this reason we think the city court of Blakely had full jurisdiction to entertain the defendant’s plea, and, if the evidence ■authorized it, to grant his prayer, which did not ask that judgment ■ be rendered for the overplus claimed by him against the plaintiff, but asked merely that he be not required to deliver up> notes which he was legally entitled to hold as collateral security for his commissions, the consequence of which would be that he would be forced to proceed to recover these notes from a non-resident, which the plaintiff corporation was alleged to be.

It was error for the court to overrule the plaintiff’s objections to testimony along the line of the paragraphs of the answer which had been stricken and of the amendments which had been disallowed, these rulings upon the pleading being an adjudication that the defendant could not plead in recoupment the commissions accruing to him under the contract; but the ruling in regard to the testimony was error only because violative of the previous ruling to the contrary. And since the defendant, by timely exception pendente lite, preserved his rights, the whole matter is now properly before this court for adjudication, with the result that we must hold that the ruling in regard to the evidence, though in a technical sense error, in effect corrected the antecedent error in striking the paragraphs of the defendant’s answer.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 927, 13 Ga. App. 759, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-fertilizer-co-v-dozier-gactapp-1913.