Mosley v. Robert Orr & Co.

6 Tenn. App. 243, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 243 (Mosley v. Robert Orr & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mosley v. Robert Orr & Co., 6 Tenn. App. 243, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 135 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This suit was brought by Robert Orr & Company against J. L. Mosley before a Justice of the Peace of Davidson county. The cause of action stated in the warrant issued' by the Justice of the Peace, is “a plea of debt due by open account $112.90 and interest $1.82.”

From a judgment of the Justice of the Peace against the defendant for $114.72, the defendant appealed to the circuit court of Davidson county, and the case was thereafter tried in the second circuit court before Judge Neil, without the intervention of a jury, and the court found that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $114.72, and judgment was accordingly rendered against the defendant and the surety on his appeal bond, R. B. Hager, for that amount and the costs of the cause. The defendant prayed on appeal in the nature of a writ of error to this court, which was granted by the trial court and perfected by the defendant.

Although J. L. Mosley, the defendant below, is the plaintiff in error here, we will, as a matter of convenience, continue to refer to Robert Orr and Company as the plaintiff and to J. L. Mosley as the defendant.

A preliminary question is presented by a motion of plaintiff to dismiss the appeal and affirm the judgment of the circuit court. The motion just mentioned is predicated upon the assertion therein that the defendant did not make and file a motion for a new trial in the circuit court.

The record shows that, within, ten days from and after the finding and judgment of the trial court, the defendant filed and presented to that court a lengthy motion styled “Motion For New Trial,” the opening paragraph of which is in these words: ‘ ‘ Comes the defend *245 ant, J. L. Mosley, and moves the court to set aside the judgment entered herein, and to modify the opinion and finding’ of fact filed herein, for the following reasons; ’ ’ and which motion contains twenty-eight . alleged grounds, set forth in. separate paragraphs and numbered from one to twenty-eight, inclusive, upon which grounds defendant asserts that the judgment of the circuit court should be set aside. Although presented in several different forms, the fundamental question which defendant attempted to raise by nearly all of the aforesaid twenty-eight assignments in his motion is that there was a fatal variance between the averments of the Justice of the Peace warrant and the proof offered by plaintiff, and that defendant is therefore not liable to plaintiff for the amount of the account sued on in this case, or any part thereof.

A motion for a new trial is an appropriate method by which to make a question of variance such as that just stated; and we think it would be “sticking in the bark” to hold that the defendant’s aforesaid motion made in the court below was not a motion for a new trial. The plaintiff’s motion to dismiss, the appeal is therefore overruled.

The trial court overruled the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and immediately following the minute entry of such overrulement, the record recites that “the defendant then moved in arrest of judgment on same grounds above, which motion was also overruled.” It is claimed for plaintiff that this cannot be treated as a motion in arrest of judgment because it is too general and indefinite and does not state any specific ground on which it is rested.

The words “same grounds above,” in the purported motion in arrest of judgment, manifestly refer to the grounds set forth in the preceding motion for a new trial, and if the motion filed as the motion for a new trial had perchance contained matters appropriate to a motion in arrest of judgment, we are not now prepared to hold that such refei’ence in the motion in arrest of judgment would not have been, sufficient to save it from the charge of a fatal vagueness and indefiniteness.

But not one of the questions which defendant makes by his motion for a new trial can be decided without a consideration of the evidence in the case, or some part of it. A motion in, arrest of judgment can be maintained only for a defect upon the face of the record, and the evidence is no part of the record for that purpose. Pelican Assurance Co. v. American Feed and Grocery Co., 122 Tenn., 652, 655; 34 Corpus Juris, pp. 31 and 29.

A motion in arrest of judgment will not lie on account of a variance between the declaration and the proof. Allen v. Word, 6 Humph., 283; 34 Corpus Juris, p. 39.

The assignments of error in this court are, with one exception, *246 copies of the twenty-eight grounds of the motion for a new trial below.

Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant requested the trial judge to file a written finding of facts; hence, under long established rules, if there is any evidence in the record to sustain the judgment of the circuit court in favor of the plaintiff, it must be affirmed.

The record discloses the following facts: One Carl Hager conducted a grocery store at 728 Gallatin Road, in the City of Nashville, from January 1, 1918, until his death on June 6, 1924. The stock of goods and fixtures and the building in which the business was conducted were bought from one Pearson, and the entire purchase-price of the building, fixtures and goods was paid by the defendant J. R. Mosley. Pearson, the vendor, conveyed the real property by deed to defendant Mosley and his wife, the latter being the mother of Carl Hager, but the stock of groceries was, at the direction of defendant Mosley, turned over to Carl Hager, who had negotiated the purchase of all the property.

Defendant Mosley was living in Texas at the time of the transaction just mentioned, but in the year of 1920 he moved to Nashville, Tennessee, and from that time forward he and' his wife occupied an apartment upstairs over the Carl Hager grocery store.

The plaintiff Robert Orr and Company is a wholesale mercantile house in Nashville, and is suing upon an account for groceries sold and delivered to Carl Hager in the year of 1924. The trial judge filed a brief written finding of certain facts, as follows:

“In this cause the court finds that the defendant J. L. Mosley was not a partner in business with Carl Hager, but that he represented himself to be a partner. The defendant, J. L. Mosley, furnished the money to put the said Carl Hager in the grocery business and was the sole owner of the house in which the business was conducted. He lived over the store and was frequently at the store when salesmen called for the purpose of selling merchandise. ’ At different times he represented that he was the owner of the business. He signed a paper to R. G. Dunn and Co. reciting that he was a partner. AYhile this is denied by defendant, I am of opinion that the weight of the evidence shows the signature to be that of the defendant J. L. Mosley.
“A. B. Neil, Judge.”

The defendant denied that he, at any time, represented that he was the owner of or a partner in the business operated by Carl Hager, and denied that “he signed a paper to R. G. Dunn and Company reciting that he was a partner,” but there is in the record ample evidence, of a material and substantial character, to sustain the aforesaid findings of the trial court.

*247

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Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 243, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosley-v-robert-orr-co-tennctapp-1927.