Dalton City Co. v. Dalton Manufacturing Co.

33 Ga. 243
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 33 Ga. 243 (Dalton City Co. v. Dalton Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dalton City Co. v. Dalton Manufacturing Co., 33 Ga. 243 (Ga. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court.

Jenkins, J., delivering the opinion.

In this case each party excepted to certain rulings of the Court below.

1. The Dalton City Company, one of the defendants, except to a decision of the Court overruling their motion to continue, on account of the absence of J. A. Glenn, their attorney of record, in the military service of the country, and the fact of his being so engaged, and being absent from the Court by reason thereof, is not disputed. The Superior Courts of this State generally, as well as this Court, have considered such absence, since the commencement of the existing war between the Confederate States and the United States, as in the nature of providential cause, and have in numerous instances allowed continuances, upon high considerations of public necessity. It is a time when the country requires the presence of its citizens in the tented field, and public policy, if not public safety, requires that there should be no impediments left in the way of those disposed to engage personally in the war. It had become the settled practice of this Court, previous to the late session of the General Assembly, to allow continuances for this cause, which, by the Act of 14th December, 1861, are expressly authorized in the Superior Courts.

2. Indeed, the Judge presiding in this case does not put his refusal to allow a continuance on the insufficiency of the ground assumed, but on its inapplicability to this ease. He was not satisfied, in the first place, that the absent attorney was of counsel in this cause. But we find that the defendant’s plea has the name of J. A. Glenn, as attorney, appended to it. No proof appears that it was placed there surreptitiously, and in the showing made by the party, it is made to appear that he was the attorney of record, and this, we think, should have been quite sufficient to satisfy the Court that he stood in that relation to the party and the ease.

3. But again, the Court assigned as a reason for overruling the motion, that J. A; Glenn had placed his professional business in the hands of another attorney of the Court, who had been present at that term, but had left the [250]*250Court before this case was called for trial, he not being in the military service of the country. It does not appear that the party applying for the continuance had ever assented to the substitution, or even been informed of it. , We hold that he was not bound ^by it, and that he should have been allowed a continuance upon that showing.

4. The Dalton City Company, (one of the defendants) filed a plea of set-off) whereby they sought to set pff) against the plaintiff’s demand, an indebtedness of plaintiff to them, in which the other defendant, Ford, had no interest. Upon plaintiff’s motion, the Court ordered this plea stricken out, and the Dalton City Company excepted.. Was this ruling of the Court correct ? It will be borne in mind that the plaintiffs below had sued the Dalton City Company and Rufus K. Ford as partners, doing business under the firm of R. El. Ford & Company) upon a note signed R. K. Ford & Company. It is not denied that the person signing and deliverering this note was Rufus K. Ford. The Dalton City Company had, by another plea, denied the partnership, and denied that the note sued on was their note. But this was a defence involving matter of fact, necessarily concluding to the country, and could only avail the party interposing it, when sustained by verdict. If the jury should find for the Dalton City Company upon this plea, there would be an end of their liability in this action. They would be protected. But in advance of the verdict, the Court could not assume that there was no partnership. Upon a motion to strike out the plea of set-off, the Court could look only to the declaration, and to that plea Í it was bound to ignore the other plea. The case, then, was this: suit against two as partners, set-off pleaded by one of them, of a debt due to that one by plaintiff, and motion to strike out the plea of set-off. We think the Court very properly sustained the motion, there being no mutuality in the demands. Partnership debts are joint. The debt from the plaintiff below to the Dalton City Company was several.

' “The statutes expressly confine the right of set-off to cases in which there are mutual debts, and it is, therefore, [251]*251clear that, as well the ■ debt sought to be recovered, as that to be set off, must be due in the same right. A joint debt, therefore, cannot be set off against a separate one, nor can a separate debt be set off against a joint demand, unless it be expressly agreed between the parties that such set-off shall be allowed.” Babington on the Law of Set-off, etc., 37.

“ A joint debt and a separate debt cannot be set off against each other.” Montague on Set-off, 25.

“ This is evident, and may be collected from all the decisions on set-off in the case of joint debts and several debts.” Ibid, note 2, g.

“ A note of one of two partners cannot be set-off against a partnership demand.” 4 Wend’s R., 583.

And for the same reason a debt due to one partner cannot be set-off against a debt due by the partners.

“Under the Bankrupt Law of the United States, a joint debt may be set-off against the separate claim of the assignee of one of the partners. But such offset could not have been made at law independent of the Bankrupt law.” 5 Cranch, 34.

Where one of tofo partners dies, and the survivor sues or is sued upon a partnership demand, set-off of a separate debt is allowed, expressly upon the ground -that the right of survivorship, accruing upon the death of one partner, converts that which was originally a joint, into a several debt. Slipper, Assignee of Lane, vs. Stidstone; 1 Esp. Cases, N. P., 47; 5 T. R., 493. French vs. Andrade, 6 T. R., 582. These cases, as well as Fletcher vs. Dyke, 2 T. R., 32 ; and Stacey, Ross et al. vs. Decy, 7 T. R., 359, (which for other reasons were excepted from the rule,) all go to affirm the general rule upon which we place this decision, viz: that a separate debt cannot be set-off against a partnership debt, nor a partnership debt against a separate debt. There is nothing in the case at bar to take it out of the operation of the general rule.

The plaintiff in error relied upon the case of Webster vs. Scales, referred to in note 2, to the text in Montague on Set-off, 27. But it will be observed that the text, supported by this reference, does not at all involve the rule governing the case at bar.

[252]*252This treatise is quite remarkable for the method pervading it. The author first treats of the law of set-off in cases of joint and several debts; that is a distinct head, and from it I have drawn authority for this case. He next treats, under a different head of the law of set-off, as affecting trustees, under which he affirms as law, “ that a debt from the cestui qui trust may be set off to an action commenced by the trustee in right of trust.”

This is the text supported by Webster vs. Scales, and other, cases mentioned in note 2, n. In all of the cases, the question was simply whether, at law, the Court could look beyond the legal title of the trustee and recognize the equity of the cestui qui trust, for tire purpose of allowing as a set-off a debt due by the cestui qui trust to the defendant, and in such case the set-off was held to be good.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Ga. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalton-city-co-v-dalton-manufacturing-co-ga-1862.