Ingram v. Jordan
This text of 55 Ga. 356 (Ingram v. Jordan) 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
The action was upon a promissory note, given by the defendant and payable to the plaintiff or bearer. Besides other pleas, the defendant filed three pleas, called in the record the 3d, 4th and 5th, which were demurred to. The demurrer was overruled, and all the pleas were left to stand. The three pleas drawn in question by the demurrer, all had relation to the same subject matter, which was this: The defendant was damaged by putting into his stables diseased horses belonging jointly, to the plaintiff and his son, the disease being contagious, and being communicated to the defendant’s horses, in consequence of which one of the them died and two others were injured. The defendant’s consent to the stabling was given without knowing of the disease. The third plea presented the damages by way of set-off, and alleged that the plaintiff, through his son (a joint owner both of the horses and the notes sued on) procured permission to put the diseased horses in defendant’s stables by falsely representing that they did not have the disease which they did have. The fourth plea presented the daihages, also, by way of set-off, and averred a contract between plaintiff and defendant by which the former undertook and agreed, if the latter would allow the use of the stables, to pay all the damages that might result from the communication of disease to the defendant’s horses. The fifth plea presented the damages, generally, by way-of bar, and al[358]*358leged that the plaintiff falsely and fraudulently represented the horses to be free from contagious diseases, etc.
Let the third and fifth pleas be stricken, and a new trial be granted.
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55 Ga. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-jordan-ga-1875.