Republic Truck Sales Corp. v. Padgett

118 S.E. 435, 30 Ga. App. 474, 1923 Ga. App. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 25, 1923
Docket14136
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 118 S.E. 435 (Republic Truck Sales Corp. v. Padgett) 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
Republic Truck Sales Corp. v. Padgett, 118 S.E. 435, 30 Ga. App. 474, 1923 Ga. App. LEXIS 510 (Ga. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Bell, J.

The Republic Truck Sales Corporation sued C. C. Padgett upon a note payable to the Georgia Republic Company Incorporated and indorsed to the plaintiff. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, but thereafter a new'trial was granted on the motion of the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted.

The only grounds of the motion for a new trial which need be considered have reference to the alleged newly discovered evidence. The note was for $5,000 and was made payable to the Georgia Republic Company Incorporated. The evidence for the plaintiff holder showed that the indebtedness for which the payee had indorsed the note as collateral was $4217.27, besides interest. Tlie plaintiff’s witness establishing this fact was fully cross-examined^ When the evidence closed, a finding was demanded that this amount was correct, and a verdict was returned accordingly. This was so undoubtedly true that a discussion of the evidence in full seems wholly unnecessary. The plaintiff company was a manufacturer and seller of trucks. The payee of the note was a dealer and purchaser from the plaintiff, and pledged the note sued on as a guaranty against loss by the plaintiff growing out of their relation. After several carloads of trucks had been shipped to the payee but not all delivered, it was adjudicated a bankrupt, with a consequent liability to the plaintiff in the amount of the verdict, for interest and freight charges and demurrage and storage on those trucks,” as stated by the plaintiff’s witness Stuart.

L. K. Rushing was sworn as a witness in behalf of the defendant, as was also T. E. Turner. The evidence of the former was apparently for the purpose of letting in the defense which the maker would have had against the original payee, while the evidence of [477]*477the latter, who was an officer of the Georgia Republic Company, related directly to the nature of the indebtedness of this company, the payee, to the plaintiff, though without exceeding particularity. From these witnesses is produced the alleged newly discovered evidence.

The factory of the plaintiff is located at Alma, Michigan. R. F. Stewart, who gave evidence for the plaintiff in regard to the amount of the debt owing to the plaintiff by the Georgia Republic Company, testified: “ This amount’ of $4217.27 due us by the Georgia Republic Company is made up of interest and freight charges and demurrage and storage on those trucks [trucks that had been sold and shipped to the Georgia Republic Company] ; the ears that we took back, I think a couple of them went up in Tennessee and two went to South Carolina (I don’t mean carloads,— single trucks), and one or two went to Florida; I didn’t send any of them back to Alma, either by carloads or individually. I know the freight on three carloads of trucks from Alma to Macon, and that is $870.31.”

In the affidavit of Rushing upon which the motion is in part founded it is deposed: “that aborit the month of September, 1921, deponent, as one of a committee representing certain stockholders in the Georgia Republic Companj' Incorporated, of Macon, Ga., which companjr had gone into bankruptcy, for the purpose of ascertaining how much and the nature of the assets of said company had gone into the bankrupt court, and of ascertaining what amount the said company owed to the Fourth National Bank of Macon, Ga., with a view of liquidating and paying said Fourth National Bank, and deponent went to Macon, Ga., and while there called upon Messrs. Jones, Park & Johnston, attorneys at law, who represented at said time the said Fourth National Bank and the Republic Truck Sales Corporation of Alma, Mich., for the purpose of ascertaining how much the said Georgia Republic Company Incorporated owed to the said Republic Truck Sales Corporation. Deponent says that upon deponent.- making said inquiry of said attorneys, he was handed by them the attached statement (hereto attached, marked ‘A’), as being a correct and full statement of the amount that said Georgia Republic Company Incorporated was indebted to said Republic Truck Sales Corporation of Alma, Mich. Deponent says that said statement so far as the [478]*478typewritten matter contained therein is exactly as the same was handed to deponent by said attorneys, the other words and figures written thereon being done by deponent in making calculations, etc. Deponent says that the defendant in above-stated case, C. C. Padgett, was not aware of the fact that deponent had the said statement before the trial of said case, and, so far as the deponent knows, had no notice of the existence of any such statement, nor did the attorney representing said C. C. Padgett in said case have any knowledge or notice,' so far as known to deponent, of the existence of said statement prior to the trial of said case.” In the statement attached is contained the item “ Freight charge for return of trucks to Alma, Mich., $993.10.” It was thus sought by the movant to establish that this item was unjust, in view of the evidence of Stewart that none of the trucks were returned to Alma.

The exact date of the filing of the suit is not shown, but it appears that it was made returnable to the September term, 1921, convening on the first Monday in September. It will be noticed that it was during this month and long before the trial that the statement including the item mentioned was given to Rushing by the plaintiff’s attorneys. In rebuttal it is deposed by R. F. Stewart, the agent of the plaintiff already mentioned, that the statement which was furnished to Rushing by the plaintiff’s attorneys was made up by him on June 1st (1921?) when he “had simply gotten up a statement for the freight charges that would be on a return of the trucks to Alma. At that time he had not determined whether to ship the trucks to Atlanta or some other point that he finally determined to ship the trucks to Atlanta at a transportation charge of $455, and that this and certain other items were included in the amount of the indebtedness shown upon the trial in lieu of the item of $993.10. It is therefore shown that this item was excluded from the testimony of Stewart upon the trial, and that it did not enter the verdict, but that the other items mentioned were included instead, amounting to less, with the result that the indebtedness claimed by the plaintiff against the Georgia Republic Company in the trial, for which the verdict was rendered, was less than that which was shown in the statement procured by Rushing from the plaintiff’s attorneys. These facts as stated by Stewart are fully consistent with the affidavit of [479]*479Bushing, the truth of which the plaintiff admits, and thus completely explains. We think therefore that the effect of the newly discovered fact produced through the affidavit of Bushing was completely rebutted by the undisputed proof of additional facts consistent with its admitted truth, but pointing to a different conclusion.

Even if there were possibly some items included in the indebtedness claimed upon the trial as to the necessity of which as a charge by the plaintiff against the Georgia Bepublic Company an issue might have been made, none was made, and, as seen, the onus was upon the defendant to prove that the debt collaterally secured was less than the amount of the note, and likewise less than the amount stated by the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.E. 435, 30 Ga. App. 474, 1923 Ga. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-truck-sales-corp-v-padgett-gactapp-1923.