Redwine Bros. v. Street

89 S.E. 163, 18 Ga. App. 77, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 18, 1916
Docket6869
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 89 S.E. 163 (Redwine Bros. v. Street) 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
Redwine Bros. v. Street, 89 S.E. 163, 18 Ga. App. 77, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 130 (Ga. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

The fi. fa. -which was the basis of the action now before us has heretofore been before this court. Redwine v. Jarrell, 14 Ga. App. 294 (80 S. E. 728). Epon the levy of the fi. fa. the defendant Street gave a forthcoming bond, with Clark and Crouch as his securities. The instant action is a suit for a breach of that bond. It appears that the defendants relied, among other defenses, upon a plea that the plaintiffs were estopped to set up a breach of the forthcoming bond, so far as certain seed-cotton included in the levy was concerned, and also upon the contention that even if there had been a breach, it had resulted in no damage to the plaintiffs in fi. fa., but that instead they were benefited by reason of the fact that the cotton embraced in the levy, and estimated to be about 175,500 pounds of seed-cotton ungathered in the field, was gathered and delivered to the sheriff as lint-cotton, ginned and baled, and that the seed had been separated therefrom and' were in marketable form.

1. Amendments to the defendants’ answer were permitted, to the allowance of which exceptions were taken in the bill of exceptions, but these exceptions must be treated as abandoned, since they are not referred to in the brief of counsel for the plaintiffs in error. It is argued in the brief that the court erred in overruling • the first, second, and third grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial, in which exception is taken to the same rulings. But that assignments of error based upon rulings or demurrers to pleadings can not be reviewed by motion for a new trial is a rule so hoary with age that it not only inspires respect but compels reverence. City of Dublin v. Dudley, 2 Ga. App. 762 (59 S. E. 284).

[79]*792. The defenses of the principal and sureties upon the forthcoming bond, as they appear in the pleadings as amended, are supported by testimony; and it does not appear that there was any substantial error in the trial, or any sufficient reason for the grant of a new trial. Summarizing the contentions of the parties as they are delineated in the record, the execution of the plaintiffs was levied, among other things, on about 10,000 pounds of seed-cotton which was gathered, and about 175,500 pounds of seed-cotton in the field and not gathered,' as well as upon certain corn, fodder, etc. The jury found the defendants liable on the forthcoming bond, for $201.50; and it is not insisted by the plaintiffs that this is not adequate compensation for any damages consequent upon the failure to produce the personalty other than the cottonseed which the makers of the bond failed to produce at the time and place of sale. The plaintiffs based their motion for a new trial upon the contention that they were entitled to recover, in addition to the sum awarded them as the value of other personalty which the makers of the bond had failed to produce, so much of the value of the seed-cotton to which we have referred as might be sufficient to discharge the fi. fa. It was shown that no seed-cotton, as such, was ever delivered to the sheriff; but it also appears that the ungathered seed-cotton, which was levied upon, was gathered and ginned and delivered to the sheriff as baled lint-cotton and cottonseed. Without pretending to assert that the defendant in fi. fa. or his securities upon the bond had the right to alter the condition of the seed-cotton by transmuting it into baled cotton and cottonseed, the defendants proved that the plaintiffs had participated in the distribution of the funds raised by the sale of the cotton and cottonseed, and had acquiesced in the distribution made by the city court of Greenville, by accepting the distributive share awarded to them. The questions presented by the various assignments of error contained in the twenty-one grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial are for the most part presentations,, in one form or another, of the objection that the defendants could not plead that the plaintiffs were estopped to insist upon a breach of their bond, and that the defendants could''not show by proof that no damage had resulted to the plaintiffs if the bond had been breached.

[80]*80It is true that estoppels are not favored. However, in Barnes v. Vandiver, 5 Ga. App. 162, 165 (62 S. E. 994), this court affirmed a judgment in a suit upon a forthcoming bond, in which the defendant relied upon a plea of estoppel, and where upon the undisputed evidence the judge directed a verdict sustaining that plea. We held, in the second headnote of that decision, that “One who defers the prosecution of his remedy under a forthcoming bond until after he has claimed the fund arising from a sale, under judicial process, of the property the production of which the forthcoming bond was given to secure, is confined to his election and estopped to assert the invalidity of the sale, the proceeds of which he has claimed.” In the ease at bar, as in the Barnes case, “the [plaintiffs] had a forthcoming bond, and . . had a right to rely upon it to the exclusion of any other remedy or agreement; but, having placed [their] liens in the hands of the sheriff and demanded the proceeds of the sale, [they] will not be heard to say that that sale was illegal,” nor will the plaintiffs be heard to say, after having accepted a portion of the proceeds of certain cottonseed ginned from seed-cotton upon which the levy was made, and the proceeds of seed which they knew had been substituted in lieu of the seed originally levied upon, that this substitution of seed was illegal. They insist that the filing of the sheriff’s answer to a rule for distribution brought against him by another litigant, in which it was stated that their fi. fa. had been levied upon certain property in question, including the seed-cotton in the field, compelled them to intervene in the proceedings by rule, and that in their intervention they expressly disavowed any right or desire to participate in that portion of the fund raised by the sale of the cottonseed which they contended were not the cottonseed originally contained in the seed-cotton which was levied upon, but other cottonseed substituted therefor. However, it appears from the proof, which we think was properly admitted in support of the pleo of estoppel, that the plaintiffs, while protesting in their intervention that they disclaimed any lien upon the proceeds of the substituted seed, actually accepted, in accordance with the distribution made by the judge of the city court of Green-ville, something more than $700 in part satisfaction of their fi. fa., which they must have known could not have come from any other source than the sale of the seed in which they had protested they [81]*81would not participate. If their protest had extended to a refusal to accept the $700 and more arising from the sale- of the seed which had been taken in place of those which were no doubt disposed of in violation of the obligation of the bond, the plea of estoppel would have amounted to nothing. But under the facts in the record the disclaimer of the proceeds by the plaintiffs, as contained in their intervention in the previous rule, only puts them in the same category with Don Juan’s inamorata, who, protesting she would “ne’er consent — consented.” As was said in the Barnes case, supra, the plaintiffs had a forthcoming bond upon which they had a right to rely to the exclusion of any other right or remedy; and it is immaterial whether an action had been instituted upon the forthcoming bond at' the time that they participated in the distribution under the rule.

3.

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

Related

Rome Builders Supply, Inc. v. Rome Kraft Co.
122 S.E.2d 133 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1961)
Gonzales v. Vargo
273 P. 725 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1929)
Boyd v. Crews
122 S.E. 802 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1924)
Hetrick v. State
109 S.E. 528 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1921)
Duffey v. State
91 S.E. 908 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 S.E. 163, 18 Ga. App. 77, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redwine-bros-v-street-gactapp-1916.