Hendricks v. Middlebrooks Co.

44 S.E. 835, 118 Ga. 131, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 475
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 835 (Hendricks v. Middlebrooks 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.

Bluebook
Hendricks v. Middlebrooks Co., 44 S.E. 835, 118 Ga. 131, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 475 (Ga. 1903).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

An action for damages was brought by B. L. Hendricks against the W. G. Middlebrooks Co., a partnership, and certain individuals 'who were members of that firm, the plaintiff alleging in his petition that they had injured him in the sum of $5,000, by reason of the following facts: “Between August 1st, 1901, and February 6th, 1902, petitioner [who was the proprietor of the Park Hotel, in the city of Macon] purchased from the said W. G. Middlebrooks Co. groceries to the amount of $212.51, as set forth by the pass-book of petitioner, the entries in said pass,book being made by defendants,” and it being furnished to him by them on March 3d, 1902. During the period above mentioned, he paid on his account $169.70, “leaving a balance due to defendants of $42.81, according to the said pass-book . . and according to the itemized statement of the account of petitioner furnished March 3rd by the said defendants.” On August 6th, 1901, he paid them “in full up to August 1st, 1901. After this payment and settlement in full, petitioner made payments upon his subsequent account” with them; and “when petitioner’s next bill was presented to him, petitioner demanded an itemized statement of the same of defendants, and defendants promised to render same to petitioner at once, but failed to do so. At numerous times after [133]*133this request, petitioner frequently asked an itemized statement of his account from the said defendants, and [they] promised faithfully each time to furnish the s’ame at once, but for some reason' unknown to petitioner the defendants failed to do so.” In the early part of February, 1902, they sent him .“a bill (not itemized) for $86.94, which amount petitioner did not owe. Petitioner at the time owed defendants, as he has since found out from the passbook and itemized statement furnished by defendants to petitioner on March 3rd, 1902, the sum of $42.81, which amount [he] stood ready at all times to pay', and did at all times tender the same to defendants and offer to settle in full with defendants upon presentation to him of an itemized account. . . Petitioner believed at the time the said bill was rendered to him that the same was not '■correct, and so informed the said defendants, and again requested an itemized statement so that the amount of petitioner’s indebtedness could be correctly ascertained.” They promised to furnish Mm the statement of account called for, but again failed to do so. •“ Upon the continued refusal of defendants to furnish the itemized statement, petitioner finally notified the said defendants that he would stop trading with them unless the said statement was rendered him.” On the 26th of February, 1902, “notwithstanding the fact that defendants had promised and agreed to furnish petitioner with the said itemized statement, [they] without warning, and in violation of their promise to petitioner to wait on him for payment until they had rendered him an itemized statement of his account, sued petitioner in the justice court of the 5 64th dist. G. M. for $86.94, when the said defendants well knew that no such sum was due them by petitioner.” At the same time “garnishments were served upon petitioner’s boarders, at the instance of the said defendants, in connection with the said suit against petitioner, both of which acts of the said defendants, viz., the.filmg and prosecuting of said suit and garnisheeing petitioner’s boarders in connection therewith, . . was a malicious abuse of legal process.” Owing to “the said willful and malicious abuse of legal process on the part of ” defendants, “ two of petitioner’s boarders, who were paying petitioner the sum of $25.00 per month each, left petitioner,” to his great injury and damage. On February 27th, 1902, “ in order to have the said garnishments dismissed, and to prevent Ms other boarders from leaving him, petitioner paid to the said de[134]*134feudants, under protest, the said amount claimed and sued for, viz. $86.94, and has since sued the said defendants for $44.13, the amount of overpayment according to defendants’ itemized statement of petitioner’s account ” and the pass-book made out by them, which were furnished to him after the suit was filed and after he had paid to them, under protest, the amount they claimed was due. The above-mentioned “ malicious and abusive use of legal process in the manner aforesaid was calculated to injure, and did injure and damage, your petitioner in the business in which he was then engaged, viz., that of prop, of the said Park Hotel.” The defendants, “not content with their willful and malicious abuse of legal process, as above set forth, by their further illegal, willful, and malicious actions in connection with said garnishments and said suit, have further injured and damaged” him in his business as follows: One of the defendants, “ O. B. Holleman, acting for the said W. G. Middle-brooks Co., and in the scope of the partnership business, went to Geo. P. Clarke and Co. and talked to Geo. P. Clarke and to S. C. Bainey, and told them that he had been forced to sue B. L. Hendricks and to garnishee his boarders in order to collect the bill that-the said Hendricks owed the said W. G. Middlebrooks Oo.; that he-had not had a settlement with the said Hendricks in six years, although the said Holleman well knew at the time that the said Hendricks had only been prop, of the Park Hotel for a little over three years at that time, and that a settlement in full had been made by. the said Hendricks on Aug. 6th, 1901, up to Aug. 1st, 1901.” The report thus published by Holleman, “ acting for the said W. G. Middlebrooks Co., was a willful and malicious slander against petitioner in the line of” his business, “added insult to injury, and slandered petitioner and petitioner’s business. The said C. B. Holleman well knew that he, acting for the said W. G. Middlebrooks Co., had promised to render” petitioner an itemized statement of his account- and to wait on him for payment until such a statement was furnished. The animus which actuated the said Holleman was further displayed by. his going to one Oscar Bradley and telling him, in substance, that he (Holleman) had found it necessary to sue petitioner and institute garnishment proceedings in order to collect a bill be owed the partnership. As a “result of said suit and garnishments sued out, as aforesaid, by said defendants,.and as a result of said slanderous reports put into circulation by the said C. B. [135]*135Holleman acting for W. G. Middlebrooks Co., petitioner’s credit has been impaired and almost hopelessly ruined; [for] it became extremely difficult, after the aforesaid conduct of the said W. G. Middlebrooks Co., for petitioner to obtain any credit whatever,” all of his “ creditors became uneasy and began coming to him and began to make inquiries and to shut off their credit;” and because of this action on their part, “ caused by the willful and malicious conduct of the said W. G. Middlebrooks Co., petitioner was forced to surrender his lease of the said Park Hotel, his lease still lacking two years and five months of having expired,” to his great injury and damage.

To this petition the defendants demurred on the grounds, (1) that it showed “ on its face that the petitioner was indebted to the defendants at the time it is alleged they brought suit against him and sued out garnishments” in connection with said suit; and (2) that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover because of the alleged reports circulated by Holleman, especially in view of the fact that at the time he made the statements set forth in the plaintiff’s petition the latter was in fact indebted to the partnership.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 835, 118 Ga. 131, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-middlebrooks-co-ga-1903.