Lampkin v. Garwood

50 S.E. 171, 122 Ga. 407, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 171 (Lampkin v. Garwood) 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
Lampkin v. Garwood, 50 S.E. 171, 122 Ga. 407, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 224 (Ga. 1905).

Opinion

Evans, J.

On December 12, 1898, Mrs. Alice L. Garwood, A. C. Lampkin and others interested in certain pending litigation, entered into a written agreement, the purpose of which was to settle all differences of the parties and to make division amongst them of a fund in controversy, as well as to determine their respective interests in certain city lots in Macon. Under the terms of this agreement, Mrs. Garwood was to receive a deed to the land in Macon, free from encumbrances, and Lampkin agreed to pay to Steed & Wimberly, a firm of attorneys who had been employed to bring a suit to recover the land, a fee for the services which that firm had rendered in that suit. The amount of this fee was not stated in the contract. It appears, however that W. P. Calhoun and Steed & Wimberly, as attorneys for the plaintiffs in the suit, had filed a lien against the land for $250 attorney’s [408]*408fees, which lien remained unsatisfied as to Steed & Wimberly. A deed was made to Mrs. Garwood in accordance with the terms of the written agreement. In the fall of 1902, she entered into negotiations for a sale of the land, but the attorneys of her prospective purchaser called attention to the outstanding lien against the land, and declined to pass the title till this lien was removed. Lampldn was notified of this condition of affairs, but failed to give any attention to the matter. Mrs. Garwood thereupon paid over to 0. P. Steed, as the representative of the firm of Steed & Wimberly, $100, an amount which he claimed was due to that firm for the services rendered, in addition to the sum of $70 which had theretofore been paid .by Lampkin. At the same time Steed gave his receipt for this payment of $100, therein stipulating that “if it should appear within six months from [its] date that said fee has been paid and settled in full with Steed and Wimberly by A. C. Lampkin,” then the $100 was to be returned, but otherwise was to be retained as money due that firm. Mrs. Garwood notified Lampkin of this arrangement, and put him on notice that should the $100 be forfeited under the agreement between her1 and Steed, she would hold him (Lampkin) responsible for that amount; but he took no steps to prevent the forfeiture, and on April 29, 1903, the time named in the agreement for settling the matter expired. In June of that year Mrs. Garwood brought suit against Lampkin upon the written agreement to which they were parties, alleging that he had committed a breach of his covenant to pay the fee of Steed & Wimberly, and that she had been compelled, in order to close her trade for the sale of the land, to pay that firm $100 under the conditions above mentioned. She further alleged that it was necessary for her to make two trips to Macon in order to have the lien on the land removed, and that she expended for railroad fare the sum of $12, which amount she was entitled to recover in addition to the amount paid to Steed & Wimberly. She further charged Lampkin with having acted in bad faith, and claimed to be damaged thereby in the sum of $50, an expense incurred by her in employing attorneys and bringing suit. Another item of damages set forth in her petition was subsequently stricken therefrom by way of amendment. The defendant demurred to the petition, on both general and special grounds, and also filed an answer in which he [409]*409denied having made any breach of covenant, having, as he asserted, “ complied with each and every covenant and stipulation in the contract of settlement, including the payment to Steed & Wimberly of their fee for the recovery of the land referred to.” The defendant’s demurrer was overruled, and the case was then tried before the presiding judge without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment for $162, besides interest and costs, was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, but it was overruled. He is now here complaining of the overruling of his demurrer, and of the refusal of the court to grant him a new trial.

1. The trial judge properly declined to dismiss the action on general demurrer. While the plaintiff’s petition was encumbered with much irrelevant matter, yet it set forth a cause of action based on an alleged breach of a clear and definite contract in writing; and if she proved her ease as laid, she would be entitled to recover the amount she expended in discharging the lien on the land, provided such amount was not in excess of the sum for which Steed & Wimberly could rightly foreclose that lien. By special demurrer the defendant set up the contention that the plaintiff’s complaint was barred by the statute of limitations; but on the argument before us, counsel for the plaintiff in error announced that this point was abandoned. The whole of para-" graphs five, six, seven, and eight of the • petition were demurred to on the ground that the allegations therein were irrelevant and impertinent. In these paragraphs the plaintiff alleged her inability to‘perfect a sale of the land on account of the unsatisfied lien for attorney’s fees, the arrangement she made with Steed in order to get this lien removed, and Lampkin’s failure to take any steps in the matter, though he was notified of this arrangement and called on to do so. These allegations were pertinent to the pase, as showing that Steed & Wimberly were asserting the lien which Lampkin had agreed to satisfy, and that Mrs. Garwood was compelled to settle the claim of that firm before she could dispose of the land. If this claim was just and unpaid, her allegations show that she was entitled to recover the amount she expended in settling the same, together with interest on that amount from the date of settlement. In the same connection the plaintiff averred that the defendant, instead of paying Steed [410]*410& Wimberly $250 in full of the fee due that firm, only paid $70 thereof, and the lien was therefore not removed from the land, of which fact she was not aware until some time subsequently, as she had relied on the defendant paying off the amount of the lien, in order that the land which had been conveyed to her might be free from encumbrance, as was his agreement under the settlement had of their previous controversies. To the allegations that she relied on the defendant to carry out his agreement, and did not know of his failure to do so until some time after the land had been conveyed to her, the defendant specially demurred on the ground that these averments were also irrelevant and impertinent. We think otherwise. The plaintiff should have been allowed some latitude in setting forth the history of her grievance and explaining when and how she discovered that the defendant had committed a breach of his covenant.

Certain other allegations, against which the same objection was urged, ought, however, to have been stricken. Besides stressing the fact that the defendant was her brother, which was wholly immaterial, the plaintiff alleged that during the fall of the year, when she was trying to perfect a sale of the land and desired to leave the State, “'her bad health and nervous condition was very greatly aggravated by the matter and the refusal of said Lampkin to assist her in it, which in equity and good conscience he should have done.” Granting that this was true, it neither gave rise to any cause of action against the defendant nor illustrated any point or issue in the case. Such allegations, in a suit for a breach of contract, not only have no place in legitimate pleading* but are calculated to mislead and prejudice the jury, if read in their hearing or commented on in the argument of the case by the plaintiff.

2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McRee v. Atlanta Paper Co.
65 S.E.2d 832 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1951)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Nix
36 S.E.2d 111 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1945)
Davis v. Melton
168 S.E. 320 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1933)
Simmons v. Simmons
122 S.E. 644 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1924)
McKenzie v. Mitchell
51 S.E. 34 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 171, 122 Ga. 407, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lampkin-v-garwood-ga-1905.