Edge v. Dorsey

50 S.E.2d 227, 78 Ga. App. 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 20, 1948
Docket32199, 32200.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 S.E.2d 227 (Edge v. Dorsey) 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
Edge v. Dorsey, 50 S.E.2d 227, 78 Ga. App. 70 (Ga. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Sutton, C. J.

John D. Edge, J. A. Gregory, and James Maddox, attorneys at law, brought this action against J. D. Dorsey. The case has been here before, and the original pleadings are substantially set forth in the report of the case in 75 Ga. App. 388 (43 S. E. 2d, 425). After the case was returned to the trial court, plaintiffs amended count 1 of the petition by striking paragraphs 1 and 2 thereof and by adding other allegations to the count. Count 2 of the original petition has been abandoned. Count 1 as amended alleged: On or about March 22,1945, plaintiffs and defendant entered into an agreement whereby defendant employed plaintiffs as his attorneys at law to represent him in handling his suit against Echota Cotton Mills, under which agreement defendant would pay plaintiffs 50% of the amount he might *71 recover ón a judgment against Echota Cotton Mills in Gordon Superior Court. On March 26, 1945, plaintiffs, in accordance with said agreement, filed suit for J. D. Dorsey against Echota Cotton Mills, seeking to recover $3,057.60. It was contemplated between the parties at the time of the agreement that Dorsey would appear in court and testify to the facts alleged in his petition, which in conversation and consultation with these plaintiffs, he represented to be true. Thereafter the case was set for trial at the August term, 1946, of said court, and Dorsey was notified and had full knowledge that the case was set for trial. When the case was called for trial, plaintiffs in the present case were present in court for the purpose of representing Dorsey in the suit against Echota Cotton Mills, but Dorsey wilfully and deliberately failed to appear in court to prosecute the case and testify therein. As a result of the failure of Dorsey to appear in court and testify to the facts alleged in the petition, the petition was dismissed. Dorsey was the only person by whom an alleged contract with Echota Cotton Mills, the basis of the action against said mills, could be proved. These plaintiffs were ready and willing to prosecute his suit to a conclusion, and the facts alleged in the petition were true, the same was a good cause of action, and Echota Cotton Mills was liable to Dorsey in the sum of $3,057.60, the amount for which suit was brought; and Echota Cotton Mills was solvent. The acts of Dorsey in wilfully and deliberately failing to appear and prosecute his case have damaged and injured plaintiffs in the sum of $1,528.80, for which they sue. The defendant filed general and special demurrers to the petition, and the same were overruled. The defendant in his answer denied the material allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition and further alleged that, prior to the date set for trial, he had requested the plaintiffs to secure the depositions of Mrs. Nancy Pendley to be used on the trial of the case, also a certain little “blue” book, the property of defendant (which, according to the evidence, had been used as evidence in a case in the Federal court in Rome, Georgia, and was in the custody of that court), and he had insisted upon having the contract with plaintiffs reduced to writing, and plaintiffs had ample notice of these things, and wilfully and deliberately and with full knowledge that defendant would not appear for the trial unless these things were done, failed to do *72 these acts, and, in addition, under the contract he was not liable to plaintiffs except for a percentage of the amount recovered against Echota Cotton Mills, and nothing had been recovered.

On the trial evidence was submitted to sustain the allegations of the plaintiffs as to the contract of employment of them by the defendant, and that pursuant thereto they had prepared and filed Dorsey’s suit against Echota Cotton Mills in Gordon Superior Court and that they were present and ready to try and prosecute that suit on the day it was set for trial; and one of the plaintiffs testified that if the facts in the petition in that case were true, a verdict would have been returned in favor of Dorsey. This witness also testified that the little “blue” book, referred to in the defendant’s answer, was in the custody of the Federal court, in another case, and could not be returned until the time for an appeal of a case in that court had expired, but that the clerk of that court had withdrawn it from the files and had let him take it to Gordon Superior Court on the day the defendant’s case against Echota Cotton Mills had been set for trial, but it did not appear that the defendant knew this. This witness testified that the depositions that the defendant had requested the plaintiffs to secure for use in the trial of the case against Echota Cotton Mills had not been taken and were not necessary, as Echota Cotton Mills had been served with a notice to produce pertinent records, which this witness said would be better evidence than could be secured by the depositions, the information being in regard to payment of pensions by the mills, but when the witness was asked what could have been done had Echota Cotton Mills failed to produce the records in court, the witness answered that he frankly did not know. The plaintiffs expected to rely largely on the testimony of Dorsey in the proof of the case, as it was by his testimony that they expected to show that the Echota Mills had agreed to pay him a pension. The contract of employment between the plaintiffs and the defendant was never reduced to writing, but plaintiffs’ testimony indicates that the original agreement for fees in handling the defendant’s case against Echota Cotton Mills had been for 1/3 of the amount recovered and 1/3 of all future amounts paid to him by said Mills, the suit being one to establish the right of Dorsey to receive a pension, and that this contract had been changed to 1/2 *73 of the amount up to the time of a judgment. The defendant testified to the effect that, if anything was recovered in his case against Echota Cotton Mills, plaintiffs would get 1/3 and he would get 2/3; that “if they didn’t collect, loss of suit,” he would get nothing and they were to get nothing; that later on there was some discussion about a change of the contract, about May 14 (1946); that Mr. Gregory and Mr. Edge first told him they were giving up the pension case; that Mr. Gregory then said, “We want half of this other case, the pension case;” and that he had said, “Well, I don’t think you boys ought to quit me;” that they had said Mr. Maddox was quitting him too; that on the next day, May 15, he went over to see Mr. Maddox and told him what had happened; and that Mr. Maddox had told him he was not quitting, that a contract was a contract to him, and all he wanted was 1/3; that he told him he wanted to get Mrs. Pendley’s depositions and to get his “blue” book so that he could go into court; that he needed his “blue” book because it had all the information in it that he would testify about in the case; that he wanted depositions of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E.2d 227, 78 Ga. App. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edge-v-dorsey-gactapp-1948.