Garrett v. Coweta Fertilizer Co.

93 S.E. 68, 20 Ga. App. 343, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 890
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 18, 1917
Docket8139
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 68 (Garrett v. Coweta Fertilizer Co.) 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
Garrett v. Coweta Fertilizer Co., 93 S.E. 68, 20 Ga. App. 343, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 890 (Ga. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Bloodworth, J.

The Coweta Fertilizer Company obtained a judgment in Carroll superior court against the Farmers TTnion Warehouse Company, H. N. Stipe, and a number of other individuals, for $3,500 principal, with interest and costs, and interest thereafter at eight per cent, per annum. Execution was issued thereon and was levied on land of H. N. Stipe, one of the defendants,. and claim was filed for this land by one of the sons of H. N. Stipe. There is evidence to show that while this claim was pending, H. N. Stipe went to Sidney Holderness, one of the attorneys for the plaintiff, and agreed to pay the plaintiff the amount of the judgment, and then proposed to employ him and Buford Boykin, another attorney, to' collect the judgment out of his codefendants, there being more than forty of them. There is also evidence that he agreed to pay Holderness and Boykin each ten per cent, for collections made on the said judgment. This agreement was denied by Stipe at the trial. Levies were made on property belonging to each of a number of the defendants, and the amount due the Coweta Fertilizer Company was reduced by collection to an amount not less than $718.81. A rule against the sheriff was answered in part as follows: “Eespondent holds in his hands a statement in writing from counsel for plaintiff which shows that there has [344]*344been collected on said fi. fa. and turned over to them $4,132, which sum respondent says is more than the amount of principal, interest, and costs due on said fi. fa. Besides said sum of $4,122 admitted by plaintiff in writing, your respondent shows they received the further sum of $133 from J. M. Garrett on December 1, 1911, for which sum defendants are entitled to credit on said fi. fa., which sum, together with the $4,122 above set out, makes a sum total of $4,255 which defendant has received on said fi. fa. In answer to paragraphs 5 and 6, respondent says that, although the above sums were paid, and received by plaintiff or its counsel, plaintiff insists that there was still due the sum of $718.81. The defendants insist that said fi. fa. was paid in full. ’Bespondent took from the defendant H. N. Stipe on July 22, 1913, the sum of $718.81 on deposit to hold him harmless against plaintiff’s claim, and settled said fi. fa. in full. This sum Stipe claims as his money, and asks that respondent return the same to him, as said fi. fa. is fully paid off, not including said sum, which respondent insists is true.”

This answer was traversed by the plaintiff, and certain of the defendants in fi. fa. filed an intervention in which they alleged that the fi. fa. had been fully paid off and settled in the manner set out in the sheriff’s answer, and prayed that the court decree that said fi. fa. had been settled in full as against the plaintiff, and that they have judgment against the plaintiff for the amount overpaid on said fi. fa., in proportion to the payments each of the defendants had made thereon, and that said fi. fa. be transferred and assigned to them in proportion to the payments they had made thereon, in order that they might hold said fi. fa. against the other defendants therein named, for contribution. The main point of difference between the plaintiff in fi. fa. and the defendants was as to the 20 per cent, commission charged by attorneys Holdemess and Boykin on a contract.made with H. N. Stipe for collections made from his eodefendants.

Upon the hearing of the case a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for $718.81 principal and $210.84 interest. A motion for a new trial was made, and upon the hearing thereof an order was passed which is hereinafter set out.

1. The rule nisi served upon the sheriff required him to answer on April 17, 1914, which was during the April term of court. [345]*345The- sheriff filed his answer as required by the rule. No traverse to the answer was made at that term. At the October term, 1914, the answer of the sheriff still not having been traversed, he moved to be discharged from the rule.. This was refused, but the court, overruling the objection of the' sheriff that it was too late for the answer to be traversed, allowed a traverse to be filed, and these rulings of the court are assigned as error in a bill of exceptions .pendente lite. To the certificate to the said bill of exceptions the judge added the following: “I further certify that the case was not called in its regular order, but the attention of the court was called to it by counsel for the respondent in the rule and the motion made to discharge the respondent. Whereupon the court had S. Holderness, Esq., counsel for movant, who had charge of the case, to be called into court when he filed the traverse. Said Holderness had leave of absence from the October 'term, 1911, of the court, for providential cause. The rule required the sheriff to answer during the April term, 1914, on a specified day during said term, and the traverse was filed at the next term,—during the October term, 1914.”

In view of the above statement, and the previous rulings of this court, there was no error in this ruling of the trial judge. No laches of plaintiff is shown. “It is expressly ruled by this court in Brantley Co. v. Southerland, 1 Ca. App. 804 (57 S. E. 960), that a traverse of the answer of the sheriff in response to a rule for alleged breach of duty can be filed, in the absence of laches, at any time before the case is called for trial. The facts in this ease exonerate the plaintiff from any laches in filing his traverse to the sheriff’s answer to the rule.” Melton v. Hicks, 7 Ga. App. 462 (67 S. E. 116). See Hendricks v. Kelly, ante, 103 (92 S. E. 395).

2. When considered in connection with the entire charge and the following order of the court, which was complied with, there are no errors harmful to the plaintiffs in error in the excerpts from the charge of which complaint is made. The order is as follows: “Complaint is made in the amended motion for a new trial that the court intimated .and expressed an opinion as to the amount the jury should find under certain-circumstances. A careful inspection of the record will disclose that the total amount collected from the several defendants, as insisted by the sheriff and the plaintiffs, is the same. Both have errors in addition of the items. [346]*346The items in the sheriff’s answer, correctly added, amount to $4,130. He retained, as shown by his entry of September 5, and December 3, 1912, $8 costs, leaving $4,122. The items, as insisted by plaintiff, correctly added, show $3,989. Add to this collection from J. M. Garrett, and the amount is $4,122. The amount due upon the fi. fa. after allowing the credits as claimed by plaintiff was more than $750 at the date of the last payment. The sums receipted for by the sheriff and entered on the fi. fa. by him, and paid over by him to Boykin, less $8 costs, plaintiff insists were collected as a, result of the employment of Holderness & Boy-kin by Mr. Stipe. The entire collections on the fi. fa., plaintiff claims, were disposed of as follows:

Collected from all sources..........................$4,122.00
Paid costs and advertising,.................$ 179.76
Paid fees Holderness and Boykin............ 823.20
Paid plaintiff as appears by entry in fi. fa...... 3,119.04
Total .........................................$4,122.00

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 68, 20 Ga. App. 343, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-coweta-fertilizer-co-gactapp-1917.