Lawson v. Dixie Feed & Seed Co.

150 S.E.2d 330, 114 Ga. App. 130, 1966 Ga. App. LEXIS 672
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 16, 1966
Docket42007
StatusPublished

This text of 150 S.E.2d 330 (Lawson v. Dixie Feed & Seed 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
Lawson v. Dixie Feed & Seed Co., 150 S.E.2d 330, 114 Ga. App. 130, 1966 Ga. App. LEXIS 672 (Ga. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinions

Eelton, Chief Judge.

1. The action being brought on a joint account, against U. A. Lawson and Sidney Thurmond, the evidence must establish a joint liability on the part of both defendants to authorize a recovery.

The following evidence was adduced on behalf of the plaintiff: J. Ralph Whitehead, president of the plaintiff company, testified as follows: That he does not know and has never seen Thurmond; that his first dealings with Lawson were 2% years ago; that they had a separate account with him and then Lawson and Thurmond were a partnership in the other purchases of fertilizer; that Lawson came into his office in June, asked about how much his account was, then asked how much was his account and Thurmond’s; that when he was told, Lawson said that he would talk to Sidney and that they would either come and pay him or he would bring Thurmond down and make a note for him; that Lawson paid-off his personal account but not the joint account; that Lawson had ordered fertilizer from him over the telephone and had it delivered to Thurmond’s place; that Lawson had always paid his personal accounts; that the credit he was extending certainly wasn’t to Thurmond, whom he didn’t even know, but to Lawson; that he “didn’t sell Mr. Lawson the fertilizer except what went on his bill”; that Lawson would tell him to put [132]*132it on his bill if it was for him and put it on “this” bill if it was for him and Thurmond; that Lawson and Thurmond each had an account; that Lawson ordered at least 8,000 pounds of fertilizer to go to Thurmond's place; that he couldn’t say which load that was because other employees of the plaintiff also took orders; that although he is charging Lawson with the crop hail insurance, the named insured was Thurmond, who took out the insurance; that he doesn’t know why Thurmond alone was the insured, although he wasn’t the only owner, unless it was because Thurmond was the “manager up there” and that Mr. Escoe, plaintiff’s secretary and manager, would have to answer that question; that Mr. Martin, another employee of the plaintiff, had been by Lawson’s place a number of times to try to get his approval to insure his cotton; that Lawson had come to his place of business, acknowledged the correctness of the account and promised to pay it; that he had denied Thurmond’s request for credit on one occasion because Lawson was unavailable to approve it; that he couldn’t testify as to where the approximately five loads of fertilizer went since he wasn’t there; that the plaintiff sent statements of the account through the mail addressed to Lawson over a period of about 4 months after his conversation with him in his office and that none of them was returned by the post office; that he didn’t know if Thurmond was living on or working Lawson’s property when the goods were delivered “up there,” nor who owned the land that Thurmond worked, nor where Lawson lives; that he knew that both defendants were working a crop by his personal conversation with Lawson and his telephone conversation with Thurmond; that Lawson had a prior account with the plaintiff in 1962 which he paid off late; that they had tried to find Lawson to get his approval on a loan Thurmond wanted to make and to sign the insurance papers, but that he stayed gone practically all of the time; that Lawson had come down there alone and told them that “they” were going to farm and had priced some fertilizer; that Lawson had asked him, “Well, are we going to be able to get the fertilizer?”; that Thurmond had ordered fertilizer from him over the telephone, this first order from him being the only time he ever made a ticket for Thurmond; that the basis of their [133]*133extending credit to Thurmond was that Lawson was “worth the money”; that in 1962 Lawson told him, concerning his fertilizer needs for 1963, that “when we need it, we will call”; that in 1963 Lawson would not pay; that Lawson had said that he and Thurmond were not in together; that he had sold them the fertilizer by the request of Lawson and Thurmond, “who were farming together”; that Lawson had bought farm equipment and let Thurmond use it; that there was “every reason given to him that they were farming together”; that they had done that before; that neither this fact nor the account was ever denied to him by Lawson.

Lewis Escoe, the plaintiff’s secretary and manager, testified that he knows Lawson; that they have a joint account set up known as the “Sidney Thurmond—U. A. Lawson account,” with a ledger sheet showing various goods delivered; that he knows of about 3 or 4 letters, none of which had been returned for insufficient address, that have been written to collect on this account in 1963; that it would be hard to determine if the names on the ledger sheet were written with different ink or pressure; that the books were under his supervision and he assumed that the names were put there at the same time, although he wasn’t an eyewitness to it; that he didn’t know personally where the fertilizer charged to the joint account was delivered; that the account had not been denied to his office until this suit was filed; that at least 6 statements were sent to Lawson of this account over an 8-month period.

R. W. Martin, another employee of the plaintiff, testified that he was familiar with the Thurmond, Lawson fertilizer accounts; that he had been by Lawson’s place looking for him on numerous occasions; that Lawson showed him a baler and a rake he had bought for Thurmond and when they went together over to Thurmond’s place, the latter showed them a good crop of cotton; that he assumed they were working together from the following facts: (1) that they were “together” in machinery, (2) that they were both interested in the cotton, and (3) that neither one of them asked him why he was there or told him it wasn’t any of his business, but both were willing to show him the crops. He further testified that he mailed Lawson a bill from the post [134]*134office at Hull, Ga.; that he remembered Lawson’s testimony from the first hearing to the effect that he had received the bill; that Lawson never “looked him up.”

Defendant Lawson testified in his own behalf as follows: that he owns several farms in Madison County; that he knows Thurmond, who lives in the vicinity of the Athens-Commerce Road in Clarke County; that Thurmond rents some land that produces hay, but does not and has never rented it or any land from him; that Thurmond never has made a crop for him and he has never had any kind of interest in any crop made by Thurmond; that Thurmond had borrowed his hay baler to save his hay crop and although he hadn’t told Thurmond, he intended for Thurmond to pay him for the tractor with the hay, so that it would be his when he paid for it; that he had been paid only $50 out of the hay sales thus far; that he had let Thurmond use his syrup mill and had been given only one quart of syrup in return; that, although he had let Thurmond plant in some of his corn land, he had not rented the land to him and did not require fertilizer for any of the transactions he had described; that he had not ordered 8 tons of fertilizer from Mr.

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145 S.E.2d 820 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1965)
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31 S.E. 438 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1898)
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Bluebook (online)
150 S.E.2d 330, 114 Ga. App. 130, 1966 Ga. App. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-dixie-feed-seed-co-gactapp-1966.