Hunter, Pearce & Battey v. Lawton-Anderson Co.

76 S.E. 782, 12 Ga. App. 23, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 21, 1912
Docket4367
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 782 (Hunter, Pearce & Battey v. Lawton-Anderson 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
Hunter, Pearce & Battey v. Lawton-Anderson Co., 76 S.E. 782, 12 Ga. App. 23, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 11 (Ga. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

The writ of error in the present case challenges the correctness of the judgment directing a verdict for the defendant. The suit was one in trover, brought to recover two bales of sea-island cotton, and the facts (which are not in controversy), briefly stated, are as follows: * The two bales of cotton were shipped by J.-T. Wright & Son to the plaintiffs, Hunter, Pearce & Battey, of Savannah, Ga. The Central of Georgia Railway Company issued to Hunter, Pearce & Battey a bill of lading covering these two bales, but subsequently, through an error on the, part of an agent of the railway company, a way-bill or manibill, covering the same cotton, named the defendant, Lawton-Anderson Company, of Savannah, as consignee, instead of Hunter, Pearce & Battey. The reasons leading to this mistake are not material. The way-bill or manibill was not delivered to the consignors or the consignee, but accompanied the shipment in the hands of the conductor. The delivery agent at Savannah, not having seen the bill of lading and having no knowledge of it, and being guided by the way-bill, delivered the cotton to Lawton-Anderson Company. This company did not know that the cotton was not intended for it; it had an account with the shippers and had occasionally received shipments [24]*24without being advised by the shippers. It received the two bales of cotton from the railway company and placed them to the credit of the shippers on its books, and held them without knowledge that they were in fact consigned to Hunter, Pearce & Battey, until it received a letter from the shippers, giving that information and requesting that the two bales be turned over to Hunter, Pearce & Battey. This request was refused. While the evidence does not disclose that .the Lawton-Anderson Company made any advances to the shippers on these two bales of cotton, yet it is fairly to be inferred, from the testimony, that the shippers .owed the company on an account, and for this reason -it kept possession of the cotton. In the meantime Hunter, Pearce & Battey had received the bill of lading for the two bales of cotton, but they had not received the bales, and they thereupon called upon the railway company to make delivery. After some delay in tracing the cotton, the facts as above stated were disclosed, and when the Lawton-Anderson Company refused to turn over the two bales to Hunter, Pearce & Battey, the latter called upon the railway company to pay their claim for the value of the cotton, and the claim was paid by the railway company. The claim amounted to $232.67. The trover suit to recover the two bales of cotton was originally in the name of Hunter, Pearce & Battey, for the use of the Central of G-eprgia Railway Company, against Lawton-Anderson Company, and on the trial the plaintiffs amended the petition by striking the1 name of the usee, leaving the case pending in the name of Hunter, Pearce & Battey. A member of the plaintiffs’ firm testified that, having been paid the value of the cotton by the railway company before the suit was filed, they had no claim thereafter, either against the defendant or against any one else, and did not claim title to the cotton. It is, however, immaterial as to what the plaintiffs claimed. Irrespective of any claim made by them, do the facts as stated show that at the time the suit in trover was filed, they had title to the cotton or the right of possession ? The learned -trial judge, believing that under the facts the plaintiffs parted with their title to the cotton when they received payment of their claim from the railway company, directed a verdict for the defendant.

Did the plaintiffs have any title or property right in the two bales of cotton which‘would have conferred the right of possession, so as to maintain a trover suit against the defendant? It is strenu[25]*25ously insisted by the plaintiffs that notwithstanding that they had been paid the value of the cotton by the railway company before the suit was brought, the title to it still remained in them, because the title could not have passed, out of them except by an assignment in writing, and that, even conceding that upon the payment to them by the railway company of the value of the cotton, the equitable title passed out of them and the railway company became the equitable assignee of this title, yet the railway 'company, as the equitable assignee, had no right to sue the defendant for the cotton or the value thereof; citing the cases of Florida Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Ricker, 136 Ga. 411 (71 S. E. 734), and McElmurray v. Harris, 117 Ga. 919 (43 S. E. 987), where it is held that the right to sue in an action of trover is in the party in whom the legal title to the personalty was at the time of conversion, and that in such an action the sole issue is as to the title to the property in dispute. This may be conceded to be true and yet not be inconsistent with the right, as equitable assignee of the title to the cotton, to bring suit therefor in some other action than that of trover; but it seems to us clear that when the railway company paid the plaintiffs’ claim for the loss of the cotton, the title to the cotton passed immediately into the railway company, and the railway company would have the right to enforce its claim as against the possession of the Lawton-Anderson Company, and this claim could be defeated by the latter only by a superior right or title. We do not see how, in any event, there was any sort of right of action in Hunter, Pearce & Battey, either for the cotton or for its value, after the railway company had paid them thé full value of the cotton. It seems to us that a resort to first principles would show this to be the only logical or legal position. If Hunter, Pearce & Battey had the right to recover from Lawton-Anderson Company the two bales of cotton, or the value thereof, they would then recover double payment for the same claim; the voluntary payment from the railway company and payment as a result of a suit from Lawton-Anderson Company. In that event, what would be the position of the railway company? Suppose Hunter, Pearce & Battey, having recovered from Lawton-Anderson Company, refused to pay the railway company, would not the railway company then be driven to the necessity of suing the former for the value of the cotton which it had paid? And then could the railway.company recover it, it being a voluntary payment?

[26]*26We can not conceive of any reason in law why, under the facts, the railway company would not have had the right to bring suit in its own name against Lawton-Anderson Company for the two bales of cotton or their value. True, in that suit the question would arise as to the relative rights of the railway company and LawtonAnderson Company. If the latter had advanced to the shippers money on the cotton, assuming that the cotton was properly consigned to it, there might be a question as to whether the railway company, whose error caused the mistake to be made, would be entitled to recover against the Lawton-Anderson Company, which had innocently and under well-founded belief as to its right to the two bales of cotton, advanced money to the owners or shippers. But this is not material in the present suit, for the only question here is, what right to this cotton, or its value, did Hunter, Pearce & Battey have after they had been paid by the railway company? We can not imagine that they had any right, either in law or in equity, to the cotton or .the value of the cotton; for upon payment, to them by the railway company of the value of the cotton, any right which they had thereto passed to the railway company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 782, 12 Ga. App. 23, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-pearce-battey-v-lawton-anderson-co-gactapp-1912.