Hamilton & Co. v. Stewart

34 S.E. 123, 108 Ga. 472, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 25, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 34 S.E. 123 (Hamilton & Co. v. Stewart) 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
Hamilton & Co. v. Stewart, 34 S.E. 123, 108 Ga. 472, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 278 (Ga. 1899).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

When this case was here before (105 Ga. 300), it was held that the court below erred in directing a verdict in favor of the plaintiff; it being then ruled that a letter written by the defendants to the plaintiff, in which was inclosed a statement of his account with them and a check to [473]*473cover a balance which this statement showed to be due him, requesting that certain notes, which were included in the statement, be cancelled and sent to them, was a proposition of settlement on the terms stated in the letter; and that the collection of the check and the retention of the proceeds by the plaintiff would, after the lapse of a reasonable time, raise a conclusive presumption of the acceptance of the proposition contained in the letter. When the case came on for trial the second time, the evidence for the defendants in support of the plea of settlement was substantially the same as on the former trial; it appearing from the same that a letter dated February 15, 1894, had been written by defendants to plaintiff, in which was inclosed a statement of the account and a check to cover the balance due plaintiff as shown by the statement, requesting that plaintiff cancel certain notes held by him against defendants and return them to defendants. Also, a letter of March 12, calling attention to the fact that no reply had been received to the letter above referred to. , Also, the testimony of the two defendants, to the effect that no reply had been received to the letters, but that the check inclosed in the first letter had been indorsed by the plaintiff and paid by the bank upon which it was drawn, and returned to the defendants as a ■cancelled check. On the second trial the evidence in rebuttal introduced by the plaintiff was, in substance, as follows : J. E. Stewart testified that he was a son of the plaintiff, and went into business with him at Spring Garden, Alabama, in January, 1894; that the letter of February 15, 1894, from the defendants, was received and by his father’s direction he credited ihe check on the larger note, indorsed and sent it forward for collection, and wrote in reply to the letter of March 12 that the notes were not settled. He was very positive that he answered this letter. He directed the letter written by him to the defendants at Rome, Georgia, and mailed it. The substance of the letter was, that something like two months before defendants had sent a check for the amount referred to, claiming that it was a full settlement and asking that their notes be can-celled and sent to them, and the reason for not complying with their request was that the notes were not paid in full. He [474]*474never heard any more from the defendants after he wrote this: letter. He is not positive that he replied to the letter of February 15; thought that he did, but did not remember the contents. The reply to the letter of March 12 was simply that the notes were not paid off, and the reply was made the day the letter was received. The check was cashed February 16. The only letters written were the two just referred to. The plaintiff testified that when he received the letter of February 15, he had the check credited on the note and wrote the defendants that the notes were not paid and that he could not return them unless they were paid off. Both letters were answered. He saw the answers written. In the answers aii-offer was made to credit the note with the amount of the check. He had a conversation with the defendant Blount ITamilton, two or three weeks later, in which Hamilton asked him why he had not returned the notes, and he told him that they were not paid off and he could not return them until they were settled. He also had a conversation with the defendant Alfred Hamilton, shortly before the check was received,.in which he made claim upon him for the whole note. Hamilton did not say whether he would or would not pay the whole note, but plaintiff went away and Hamilton told him that he would send a check in a day or two. Plaintiff left under the impression that he would send check for- the whole amount of the note. In the conversation had with Blount Hamilton no demand was made for a return of the amount of the check. Plaintiff’s son writes his letters and has authority to sign his name to the same.

The court directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants. The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial, upon the general grounds, and upon the grounds that the court erred in directing a verdict, and in excluding evidence offered by the plaintiff to the effect that nine hundred dollars in the account against plaintiff was due on a cotton-future transaction which the defendant Alfred Hamilton had attended to for him, and that while the same was in progress plaintiff expressed dissatisfaction with the way it was being managed and desired to-withdraw from the same, when Alfred Hamilton said to him r “No, I am tending to that. Let it run; you mustn’t touch [475]*475that. I will run that out, and yon shan’t lose nothing. If-1 don’t make it back I will lose it; ” that his understanding was ■ that Alfred Hamilton was not to make any claim against him on account of the losses in the cotton-future transaction; that the nine hundred dollars in the account was for advances made at different times for losses on these contracts for future delivery of cotton, and that was the item he objected to and refused to allow. The judge passed an order granting a new trial, upon the ground that he erred in directing a verdict and in excluding the evidence referred to in the motion for a new trial.

When the case was here before, the only question then left open to be determined at another trial, if the evidence was substantially the same, was whether the time that elapsed between the date of the receipt of the letter of February 15 from the defendants and the time objection was made to the terms of settlement therein offered, shown to be a few months before the-present suit was filed, was such an unreasonable time for the plaintiff to -wait without communicating his objections to the-proposition submitted by the defendants that they would have a right to presume that the proposition contained in the letter had been accepted. Upon the trial now under consideration the evidence was not exactly the same as it was at the former trial, and it becomes necessary to deal with the case made by the present record. The defendants claimed that the plaintiff" was indebted to them on an account. They admitted that they were indebted to the plaintiff on two notes. They testified that no objection -was ever made by the plaintiff to the proposition contained in the letter of February 15, by letter or otherwise, and that no reply was ever received to the letter of March 12. In reply to this plaintiff contends that he promptly replied by letters duly posted, the substance of each reply being that he-could not accept the check inclosed in the letter of February 15, except as a credit on the note. He testified that in a conversation with one of the defendants, shortly after the letters’ had been received, the defendant asked him why he had not returned the notes, and the plaintiff replied, because they were not paid. There was no evidence whatever showing that the-plaintiff offered in the letter claimed to have been written by' [476]*476him to return the check, or that he offered to return the amount of the check in the conversation with one of the defendants above referred to, nor was there ever at any time any offer to return either the check or the proceeds. The defendants testified that the letters claimed to have been written to them by plaintiff were never received by them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 123, 108 Ga. 472, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-co-v-stewart-ga-1899.