Penitentiary Co. v. Gordon

11 S.E. 584, 85 Ga. 159
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 584 (Penitentiary Co. v. Gordon) 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
Penitentiary Co. v. Gordon, 11 S.E. 584, 85 Ga. 159 (Ga. 1890).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

The governor brought suit on the bond of the defendant for $3,800 damages caused by the escape of nineteen named convicts, giving the date and place of each, and alleging that each and every escape was negligent and caused by the carelessness and insufficient watchfulness of the guards, employees and officers of the company who were in charge of the convicts. Attached to the declaration is a copy of the bond in the sum of $37,500, dated June 21, 1876, requiring, among other things, that the principal shall keep the convicts hired to it “securely, without expense to the State, and with such guards and safeguards as the law requires, and manage and keep them in aeeoi’dance with the rules and regulations now of force or which may hereafter be legally adopted for the control of such convicts, . . report under oath all escapes and the- circum[165]*165stances attending the same, as required by law, to the principal keeper, and shall pay the damages specified by law for each negligent escape, . . and shall in all respects discharge their duty under the law touching the management, control and keeping of said convicts.” This declaration was amended by alleging that “the principal keeper having laid these and other facts before the governor of Georgia, Henry D. McDaniel and John B. Gordon as governors of the State of Georgia did, from all the circumstances attending said escapes and by other means, find the aforesaid nineteen escapes were caused by negligence, and they as aforesaid did order suit to be instituted for damages against Penitentiary Company No. 2, as provided by law.” To this declaration the defendant filed two pleas: (1) the generad, issue, and (2) accord and satisfaction. On the trial the jury returned a verdict for $3,800. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, on the several grounds therein stated, which will be found set out in the official report.

1. The 1st, 2d, 3d and 4th grounds may be considered together. They are the usual ones that the verdict is contrary to law and the evidence. The 4th ground specifies wherein the evidence fails to support the verdict, and says there was no proof that the .persons alleged to have been escaped convicts were convicted by courts of competent jurisdiction, nor as to the sentences under which they were held, and no legal proof that they were convicted at all, nor of the dates of the expiration of the sentences. Upon these grounds generally, we have to say that we have carefully examined the evidence sent up in this record, and that it is sufficient to sustain the finding, of the jury. The question of negligence was fairly submitted to the jury by the court in its charge, and there being evidence to sustain the verdict, and the trial judge being satisfied [166]*166therewith, we will not interfere with his discretion in refusing to grant a new trial upon these general grounds.

2. As to the specification in the 4th ground recited above, we think that when the State showed by evidence that the defendant received these prisoners as convicts it made out a prima facie case, and if they were not convicts or had never been convicted by a court of competent jurisdiction, the burden was cast upon the defendant to show it. The reception of them by the defendant from the officers of the State as convicts, was an admission on its part that they had been convicted and sentenced, and while the defendant may not be es-topped from denying it, the burden is certainly cast upon it to prove that they were not convicts.

5. We cannot consider the 5th ground, because' the overruling of a demurrer is not a ground for a motion for a new trial, as we have frequently decided.

5. The 6th ground complains of the admission in evidence, over objection of the defendant, of two certified copies of executive orders of the governor, dated September 29th, 1885, and October 27th, 1886 ; the first reciting that the defendant had had, from November 2, 1882, to July 1,1885, thirty-six escapes (naming them); that after consultation with the attorney-general, the excuses rendered in the cases of eighteen of them (naming) were deemed satisfactory, and the excuses submitted in the cases of the others were deemed unsatisfactory and insufficient to relieve the company from the penalty imposed by law in such cases; and that it had paid into the treasury for the escape of nine of these (naming), and refused to pay the same sum for the escape of the remaining nine ; and therefore it was ordered that suit be instituted on the bond of the company, as provided by law, for the recovery of the penalty in each of the cases of the nine last mentioned. [167]*167The other order is in similar form, and directs that in default of payment, by November 16, 1886, to the State treasurer of $200 each for the escapes of ten named in which the excuses rendered were held to be unsatisfactory, suit be brought as above stated. The objection to these orders was, that no issue as to the right of the plaintiff to bring the suit was made, and that the defendant could not be hound by any judgment in them.

There was no error in admitting these orders as evidence. They were the basis of the right of the plaintiff to recover in the case. If the plaintiff had failed to show that the. governor had considered these escapes and had rendered his judgment that the defendant was negligent therein, he would have failed to make out his case, and the court would have been compelled on motion to grant a nonsuit. The 7th section of the act of 1876 (p. 40), relating to the leasing out of penitentiary convicts by .the governor, declares that “it shall be the duty of the lessee or lessees under this act, immediately after any escape, to make a report in writing to the principal keeper, who shall lay the same before the governor, of all the circumstances attending such escape, and if the governor shall find therefrom, or by any other means, that such escape was caused by negligence, it shall be his duty to institute suit for the damages herein provided for.” The law at that time made it a condition precedent to bringing suit for the escape of a convict, that the governor should find that the escape was negligent. He was required to make the investigation from the reports of the lessees, and by other means, and render his decision before suit could be brought. There was no presumption against the defendant until that decision by the governor was rendered. "When he did make the investigation and determined that the defendant was negligent, that decision became prima fade the truth, and was binding [168]*168on the defendant to that extent; and when the decision embraced in the order was introduced in evidence before the jury, unless the defendant rebutted it and overcame it by proof, the decision was sufficient to authorize the jury to find in favor of the plaintiff. Under the act of September 27th, 1889 (p. 149), the rule has been changed. This act declares “that every escape shall be held and deemed negligent, unless within the sixty days allowed by law for the payment of damages for escapes, it shall be made to appear by competent evidence submitted to the governor that such escape was not negligent.” Under the former act, the burden was on the governor to investigate escapes and render his decisiou that the lessee had been negligent. Under this act, no investigation by the governor is necessary, unless brought about by the lessee. The burden is cast upon him within sixty days from an escape to prove to the governor that the escape was not negligent.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 584, 85 Ga. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penitentiary-co-v-gordon-ga-1890.