Gorday v. Scott & Co.
This text of 73 S.E. 732 (Gorday v. Scott & 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.
Opinion
Scott & Company brought suit against S. T. & J. H. Gorday on four promissory notes, each being dated January 27, 1906, and due, respectively, February 1, April 1, June 1, and August'1, 1907. The defendants' admitted a prima facie case and assumed the burden of proof. It appears that the four notes sued on, together with certain others, were given for the purchase of a certain sawmill outfit, consisting of a boiler, engine, wagons, mules, a barrel of lubricating oil, and other articles of personal property going to make up the outfit. The defendants pleaded, among ■ other issues, a. partial failure of consideration, alleging that the plaintiffs failed to deliver to defendants one of the mules included in the outfit, which it is averred died in possession of the plaintiffs before it was delivered, being of the value of $175, and that a barrel of oil worth $15 was not delivered; and they claimed a credit for the aggregate of these two amounts. Defendants in their plea alleged further, that subsequently, after certain of the notes which they had given for the outfit.became due, being unable to pay the same in cash, they agreed to deliver four mules, which they were then using in and about the business of operating the sawmill, at the stipulated price of $850; that this was to be in payment of the indebtedness to the plaintiffs, which was past due, and the note next maturing and the sum of $50 on one of the notes which became due subsequently; that the plaintiffs accepted the mules under this agreement, but when the plaintiffs sent an agent of theirs to take possession of the mules, he left with an agent of the defendants, who did not know of the terms of the contract upon which the mules were to be delivered to the plaintiffs, certain notes which were not then mature, instead of the notes which were past due, in violation of the con[425]*425tract between the parties; and that afterwards, on the 17th day of October, 1906, the plaintiffs maliciously and without probable cause instituted attachment proceedings for the purchase-money of the property sold by them to the defendants, which they alleged to be due and unpaid, and the attachment was levied on the sawmill and other personal property constituting the sawmill outfit. The defendants further pleaded, that possession of the four mules which were delivered by the defendants’ agent to the plaintiffs was obtained by fraud; that they had tendered back to the plaintiffs the notes which had been left when the mules were taken away; that they had demanded the return of the mules by the plaintiffs, which demand was refused, and that this amounted to a conversion of the property. Defendants allege the insolvency of the plaintiffs, and say that they are entitled to recover the value of the mules and their hire, and also damages incurred in consequence of the suing out of the attachment and the seizure of the sawmill outfit.
At the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the amount of $697 principal, together with interest, costs, and'attorney’s fees.
Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
73 S.E. 732, 137 Ga. 423, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorday-v-scott-co-ga-1912.