Dolvin v. American Harrow Co.

54 S.E. 706, 125 Ga. 699, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 18, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 54 S.E. 706 (Dolvin v. American Harrow 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
Dolvin v. American Harrow Co., 54 S.E. 706, 125 Ga. 699, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 1 (Ga. 1906).

Opinion

Lumpkin, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1-2. “If upon demurrer the court has decided the merits of the cause, the judgment may be pleaded in bar of another suit for the same cause.” Civil Code, §3744. “If in rendering its judgment upon a demurrer to a petition the court does not decide upon the merits of the ease, a judgment sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the action is not a bar to another proceeding for the same cause.” Papworth v. Fitzgerald, 111 Ga. 54. This ruling was made in regard to the plaintiff’s petition, but the same principle would govern in regard to a judgment upon a demurrer to a plea. If the judgment determines that the defense set up by the plea is [704]*704not good in law, this is an adjudication on the merits; and if substantially the same plea is offered again, it is res adjudicata. But if a plea is dismissed, not for lack of merit in the defense, but merely because the allegations are too general and wanting in specification, this is not an adjudication on the merits; and if a plea fully and distinctly alleging a good defense is offered, the matter is not res adjudicata. The difference between the result of a ruling on a declaration and a ruling on a plea is that, if a declaration is once dismissed for any cause, the case is out of court, and there is nothing to amend by; but the striking of one of several pleas does not take the case out of court, and there is still an opportunity for amendment, subject to the restrictions prescribed by the law in that regard, and the power of the court to impose terms, in proper cases. Civil Code, §§5097, 5057, 5068, 5101.

An examination of the statement of facts preceding this opinion will show that the original allegation of fraud was stricken because it was not set forth “as required by law” (which we understand to mean, without sufficient specification), and that the amendment offered was very different. Whether this amendment amounted to a good plea of fraud, or not, we express no opinion. The judge, in passing on its merits, might hold it to be a good plea, or he might hold that it made one of those not infrequent cases where the parties say one thing orally and another in the written contract, and fail to show any sufficient reason why they signed it as written. A man can not talk one way as to a contract, deliberately and knowingly sign it in writing another way, and expect the courts to relieve him of the results of his folly. As to this plea we say nothing, as the trial judge has not passed on the point. What we hold is that the matter was not res adjudicata by reason of the decision on the demurrer.

3. The presiding judge held that the allegations in reference to accident and mistake constituted no valid defense. In this we are unable to agree with him. “Mere ignorance of the law on the part of the party himself, where the facts are all known, and there is no misplaced confidence, and no artifice or deception or fraudulent practice is used by the other party, either to induce the mistake of law or to prevent its correction, will not authorize the inters vention of equity.” Civil Code, §3978. But “an honest mistake [705]*705of the law as to the effect of an instrument on the part of both contracting parties, when such mistake operates as a gross injustice to one, and gives an unconscientious advantage to the other, may be relieved in equity.” Civil Code, §3979. The distinction between ignorance of what the law is, and mutual mistake as to the effect of an instrument, may not always appear to be very clearly defined; but it is well settled that there is a distinction. Culbreath v. Culbreath, 7 Ga. 64; Adair v. McDonald, 42 Ga. 506; Ham v. Parkerson, 68 Ga. 830.

It was alleged in the proposed amendment, that facts existed which would have authorized the defendant to plead failure 'of consideration to the original note; that under the statement of the agent of the plaintiffs a new note was given, the result of which would be to destroy that plea (Lunsford v. Malsby, 101 Ga. 39); that this was only intended afe a security until the settlement agreed on should be consummated; that the agent, for the purpose of giving him “a showing” for his protection, wrote, signed in the name of the plaintiff, by himself as agent, and delivered to defendant a paper which read, “I agree to receipt J. G. Dolvin for note given me to-day, April 11, 1901, for $934.18, note due January 1st, 1902;” that this was intended by both parties to signify an agreement on the part of the plaintiff to receipt for and cancel the obligation represented by the new note, upon compliance, with the agreement to deliver up the unsold harrows and account for those sold; that it was drawn by the agent and accepted by the defendant, who was unlearned in the law; and that the use of inapt words to accomplish that result, and the fact that the paper may not have that effect, was due to a mutual mistake. It was alleged that there was a mutual mistake as to the effect of this instrument; or, if not, that then there was a deliberate trick of the agent to destroy the defendant’s legal defense to the first note and give him a meaningless paper under the guise of a protection against the last note.

It has been held that this paper was not ambiguous, and could not be explained by parol. American Harrow Co. v. Dolvin, 119 Ga. 186. But we can well understand how there might' have been a mutual mistake in regard to its effect. To receive a note, and at the same time give, not an actual receipt for it, but an agreement to receipt for it, is unusual. What the parties may have meant we [706]*706do not say; but the plea of mutual mistake as to its effect was sufficient to withstand the objection urged against it in its entirety, in the nature of a general demurrer. In so far as the plea sought to allege that the original contract and note were not what they plainly purported to be, it was insufficient. Nor was it a sufficient plea as to other instruments beside the particular one pleaded, and as to which a mutual mistake of law was alleged. A mere general reference to “other blank forms” required to be signed is no proper plea of mutual mistake as to such instruments as may have thus been signed. No objection, however, appears to have been raised, or ruling made, as to any special part of the plea, but only to the whole. Let it be borne in mind also that for a plea of mutual mistake of law to prove a successful defense, the mistake must have been mutual as to the effect of the instrument. Mere general statements of omissions avail nothing. “An allegation of fraud, any more than an allegation of mistake, can not be used as a mere cover to bring in an oral agreement, contemporaneous with the note, and in variance with its terms.” Mansfield v. Barber, 59 Ga. 854; Smith v. Brooks, 75 Ga. 356, 360.

4. It is a rule of law that ratification involves knowledge of the facts on the part of the person ratifying, at the time when the ratification is made. But it is also a rule that if an agent exceeds his authority, the principal can not ratify in part and repudiate in part; he must adopt either the whole or none. Civil Code, §3021; Hodnett v. Tatum, 9 Ga. 70; Howard v. Cassels, 105 Ga. 412; McLean v. Clark, 47 Ga. 26.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.E. 706, 125 Ga. 699, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolvin-v-american-harrow-co-ga-1906.