Murray v. Davidson

162 S.E. 526, 174 Ga. 213, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1932
DocketNo. 8637
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 162 S.E. 526 (Murray v. Davidson) 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
Murray v. Davidson, 162 S.E. 526, 174 Ga. 213, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 25 (Ga. 1932).

Opinion

Hines, J.

J. E. Davidson brought suit against W. D. Murray on three promissory notes of the latter, the three being for the sum of $5,73-1.35. These notes were payable to A. J. Evans and J. E. Da-vidson. Murray filed a plea setting up the payment of these notes. In his plea he alleged that on October 19, 1933, he bought from the Oak Lawn Eruit Farm, a partnership composed of Davidson and Evans, a tract of land known as the Sunset Lands; that he paid on the purchase-price thereof the sum of $1,000; and that he gave the three notes for the balance of the purchase-price. In his plea he further set up that Evans, from January 1, 1933, up to the year 1937, made advances to him for the purpose of operating said farm, and that he delivered to Evans all the products raised on said farm from the time he bought it until the year 1938. He further alleged that each year when he delivered to Evans, who was acting for said partnership, the products from said farm, he directed that the proceeds arising from the sale thereof be applied, first, to the money that he had been so advanced for operating the farm, and, second, to the pajunent of the notes given by him for the purchase-price of the farm. He alleged that Evans agreed that the money to be derived from the sale of the products of said farm should be so applied. He further alleged that lie delivered the farm products grown on said land for the years 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, and 1937 to Evans for said partnership, and that Evans sold said products and realized therefrom $18,000. He further set up that all the money advanced by Evans between the time he purchased said place and the time of filing his plea did not exceed $8,000, and that said partnership had received $10,000, which was more than he owed on the purchase-price of said farm. In this manner he alleged that he had [215]*215fully paid said notes. He prayed for specific performance of liis contract of purchase, and in addition for a judgment for $±,000, the amount he paid to Evans for said partnership over and above the amount of said purchase-money. Murray introduced evidence tending to establish his plea of payment and the allegations therein set out.

Davidson denied that Murray had paid these notes in the manner set out in his plea of payment, or had paid these notes in any way. He set up, that, prior to the time when Murray purchased said lands, Murray and Evans had been operating the Suburban Fruit Farm, that after the purchase by Murray of the Sunset Lands the latter land was operated as a part of the Suburban Fruit Farm by Evans and Murray and was not operated as a separate enterprise, that Murray had only an interest in the net profits of the operation of both the Sunset Lands and the Suburban Fruit Farm, and that there were no net profits arising from the joint operation of both, to be applied to the payment of the notes sued on. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to establish his allegations upon this subject.

On October 8, 1930, during the September term, 1930, of the superior court, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of the defendant. On that day the plaintiff moved for a new trial upon the general grounds. The motion was set to be heard at Macon, Georgia, in vacation, on November 15, 1930. At the same time an order was taken that movant might amend his motion at any time before the final hearing, and that the movant should have until the hearing, whenever that might be, to prepare and present for approval a brief of the evidence in the case; that the presiding judge might enter his approval thereon at any time either in term or vacation; and that if the hearing of the motion should be in vacation, and the brief of evidence had not been filed in the clerk’s office before the date of the hearing, the brief might be filed in that office at any time within ten days after the motion was heard and determined. On February 21, 1931, plaintiff amended his motion for new trial by .adding thereto certain special grounds. The judge on the same day approved the grounds of the motion for new trial as amended; and ordered the same filed as a part of. the record in the case. On the same day plaintiff presented to the judge a document purporting to be a brief of the evidence intro[216]*216duced on the trial. On this brief was an agreement, dated January 31, 1931, which was signed by counsel for both parties, in which they agreed that the document contained “a true and correct brief of so much of the evidence adduced upon the trial of the case . . as is material to the pending motion for new trial therein.”

Thereupon the motion for new trial was heard; and the judge reserved his decision upon the motion.

While the trial judge had the decision of the motion under advisement, the defendant, on May 16, 1931, filed his motion to dismiss the motion for new trial, upon the following grounds: (1) Plaintiff and his counsel had been negligent in not having the evidence transcribed in order that the brief of evidence might be presented to the court for its approval long before February 21, 1931; and if they had been diligent, the motion for new trial could have been heard on November 15, 1930. (2) Movant did not present a legal brief of the evidence within the time fixed by the orders of the court, nor did he make a bona fide attempt to brief the evidence within the time fixed by the orders of the court, and did not present to the court within the time fixed by its orders a proper and legal brief of the evidence. (3) The order approving the document tendered on February 21, 1931, as a brief of the evidence in said case, was improvidently and illegally granted, for the reason that movant did not present a legal brief of the evidence as provided by law, the original order on the motion for new trial providing that the movant should have until the hearing to prepare and present for approval a brief of the evidence; that it is fatal to the motion for new trial that no legal summary of the material parts of the record and evidence were submitted to the court before the hearing on the motion began; and that the order approving the brief of the evidence should be vacated, for the reason that the movant utterly failed to comply with this indispensable requisite. Defendant prayed that the order approving the brief of the evidence be revoked and vacated; that the motion for hew trial be dismissed for failure on the part of the plaintiff to present for approval any brief of the evidence within the time provided by the orders of the court; and that the said paper purporting to be a brief of the evidence presented to the court on February 21, 1931, be purged of all superfluities, and be put in legal form, and that the motion for new trial be dismissed because [217]*217of the imperfections therein. Defendant further prayed that the motion for new trial be dismissed' on the ground that plaintiff did not make a bona fide attempt to brief the evidence in said case as required by law.

Movant filed a response to the motion to dismiss his motion for new trial, in which he set up that counsel for defendant would not agree to a brief of the evidence without the stenographic transcript thereof and unless it contained practically all that was contained in such report. To meet this objection of counsel for the defendant and to save the trial judge the trouble of considering for approval a brief of the evidence not agreed to by counsel, he then submitted to counsel for defendant a brief of the evidence substantially as set out in the record. The same was carefully gone over by counsel for the defendant, and some corrections were rmade therein at the instance of defendant’s counsel.

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24 S.E.2d 318 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1943)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 S.E. 526, 174 Ga. 213, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-davidson-ga-1932.