Flournoy & Epping v. Williams
This text of 68 Ga. 707 (Flournoy & Epping v. Williams) 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.
Opinion
The plaintiffs brought their suit against the defendant to recover a balance alleged to be due, with interest, on account stated, attached as a bill of particulars. To this suit defendant filed a plea of set-off by account, in which he alleged plaintiffs were indebted to him for commissions due on seventy tons of guano sold for him at four dollars per ton. Under the evidence and charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant below for the sum of eighty-four dollars and eighty cents.
The plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial on several grounds, which was refused by the court, and plaintiffs excepted. The defence set up by plaintiffs to the account plead as a set-off by defendant', was that the defendant was not entitled to receive his commissions on the guano sold until all the guano notes were collected; that defendant guaranteed the Collection on the guano he sold ; that there was still unpaid a large amount of the guano sales made by defendant. That if they owed any one for the commissions on said guano sales, they owed Williams, Martin & Bro., as partners, and not Williams alone, and hence, the set-off pleaded was not a mutual debt between plaintiffs and defendant, and could not be pleaded as a set-off in this suit. Upon these two points the controversy in the case was heard.
We cannot, after a careful examination of the testimony, see that the charge as requested was pertinent, or supported by the facts proved on the trial. The issue presented [710]*710was, whether there was a partnership between Williams and Martin & Bro., as to plaintiffs. It is an undisputed fact that the original contract was made between the plaintiffs and Williams, for him to sell this guano. Afterwards Williams seems to have interested Martin & Bro. as agents to aid him, as he claims, in the work. Admitting they were, as claimed by plaintiffs, joint agents with Williams, that of itself does not constitute them partners as to plaintiffs, if they were not embraced in the contract Williams made. If Williams made the contract alone with plaintiffs, and he afterwards engaged Martin & Bro. as his agents, to aid, the contract still was between him and plaintiffs, and he could collect on it without joining Martin & Bro.
Williams testifies he employed Martin & Bro. Such is also the testimony of Martin, and this is corroborated by Flournoy himself, one of the plaintiffs, and the bookkeeper, who testified that Williams contracted with the firm ; and we find no evidence in the record that changes this contract, as between Williams and the plaintiffs,-so as to make Williams and Martin & Bro., partners in their dealings with plaintiffs. We see, therefore, no relevancy in the charge asked for under the facts, but it only would have presented an irrelevant issue to the jury, without aiding them to a conclusion. The two simple questions in this case were, did the defendant, Williams, guarantee the collection of the guano debts contracted, as claimed by plaintiffs ? Second, were the parties who sold this guano partners, as to these plaintiffs, in any contract made with them that would make the debt due for commissions on sales had a debt due to them as partners, and, therefore, not such a debt as defendant, Williams, could plead as a set-off to plaintiffs’ suit ?
On both of these issues of fact, under the evidence, the jury have passed, and, we think, admitting it is conflicting, there is sufficient evidence to sustain their finding, and as the law of the case was fairly given in charge, we see no legal reason for disturbing the verdict.
Judgment affirmed.
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