Withers v. Sandlin

36 Fla. 619
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 36 Fla. 619 (Withers v. Sandlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Withers v. Sandlin, 36 Fla. 619 (Fla. 1895).

Opinion

Liddon, J.:

The appellee, plaintiff below, brought suit against the appellant, defendant below, upon a claim assigned to him (appellee) by one I. T. Carter. This claim was-an account of said Carter against E. J. Baker deceased, the intestate of the appellant, and was attached to-the declaration as a bill of particulars, and was as follows :

E. J. Baker to I. T. Carter ■ Dr.
Sept. 15, 1888.
Surveying and locating fifty lots of lands in Echols county, Ga................$2,750.00’
To 5 months’ services rendered E. J. Baker, ending November 23, 1888................ 125.00
Total...................$2,875.00
Received on the within r claim five hundred and seventy-two 78-100 dollars, October 3,
1890......’................. $572.78-
Balance due...........................$2,302.22

The declaration contained the usual common counts. The defendant plead several pleas, all of which were equivalent to a plea of never was indebted upon the-part of the appellant’s intestate. Upon trial verdict and judgment were rendered against defendant for $2,000 and costs, from which defendant appealed. Several assignments of error were made. We consider .all of them that are argued and appear necessary to a disposition of the case, or to guide the court upon a new trial.

Upon the trial the plaintiff offered some evidence which was objected to by defendant upon the ground. [622]*622that it was “not proper testimony for the jury.” The court overruled the objection. We do not think any grounds of objection were stated so as to require us to review this ruling. The mere objection that the evidence was not proper, is too vague and indefinite, and without weight before an appellate court. In order to review in an appellate court objections to the admission of testimony overruled in the court below, the specific grounds of the objection should be stated. Gladden vs. State, 12 Fla. 562. In Carter vs. Bennett, 4 Fla. 283, text 338, this court quotes with approval the Supreme Court of New York as being in perfect agreement with the Supreme Court of the United States, as follows: “A party who objects to evidence or the competency of witnesses should state specifically the grounds of his objections. It is not sufficient to object generally that the evidence is illegal, or the witness is incompetent; but the party objecting must put his finger upon the very point, to apprise the court and his adversary of the precise objection he intends to'make.”

The defendant offered in evidence a receipt dated April 1st, 1891, for a large payment upon the claim sued upon, given by Carter, the assignor of such claim. The court excluded the receipt. There was no error in such ruling. The pleas upon which issue was taken were filed February 2d, 1891, nearly two months before the date of the receipt which was excluded. There was no issue in the case to which the evidence was applicable. The matter of defense sought to be established by the evidence offered was one arising after the commencement of the action. The pleas in the case did not state whether the defenses arose before or after action begun, and according to our statute must be deemed pleas of matters arising be[623]*623fore action brought. Sec. 45, p. 823, McClellan’s Digest; sec. 1066 Rev. Stats. This disposes of the assignment, but as the case must be remanded for a new trial, we think it proper to speak of the merits of the matter of the exclusion of this receipt. The declaration contains an express allegation that Carter, the original claimant, “transferred and assigned all his right and demand to the plaintiff, of which defendant had notice.” This assignment by Carter to the plaintiff is not denied by any plea in the case. If Carter had transferred all of his right and demand to the plaintiff, it could not avail the defendant to make a payment to one who had no right to receive the same. Unconnected with proof of authority given by plaintiff to Carter to collect, the giving of a receipt by Carter could not effect any right of the plaintiff, and the evidence offered was for that reason wholly irrelevant. It is claimed, however, that the account was not transferred to the plaintiff absolutely, but only as collateral security. The receipt given the defendant, as administrator, which was offered, itself states that the money was “in part payment of account due me by the estate, and said account is nowin the hands of W. T. Sandlin as collateral for money I owe him.” Thus the defendant was advised by the very receipt given him that the accountmpon which the payment was made was out of the possession and control of Carter, to whom payment was made, and that it had been pledged by him to plaintiff as a collateral security. That the assignment of' the account by Carter was as collateral security, instead of an absulute transfer of title, can not alter the case, in the absence of proof that the indebtedness of Carter to the plaintiff secured by the assignment had been paid. The assigned account would be of no value as collateral security if the as[624]*624signor might continue to treat it as his - own and receive payment thereof. He had parted with his possession, right of possession and power to receive payment of the paper, and the plaintiff can not be bound by any payment made to Carter by defendant, while the defendant had full notice and knowledge of the plaintiff’s rights on the matter. This will be more apparent a little further on in the course of this opinion when we consider the terms of the assignment and the rights of one who holds a paper as collateral security.

It is alleged that the Circuit Court erred in refusing to grant a new trial in the case. Among other grounds of the motion for new trial it is asserted that the verdict -was contrary to law and evidence, and excessive in amount. Examination of the record shows that the account sued upon, as shown by the bill of particulars attached to the declaration, was for “surveying and locating fifty lots of land in Echols county, Georgia, $2,750, and five months’ services at $25, $125.” Upon trial the plaintiff offered an account for “surveying and locating fifty-eight lots of land in Echols- and Clinch counties, 'State of Georgia.” A. M. Knowles, a witness for plaintiff, testified that the lands which were surveyed, and for the surveying of which the. suit was brought, were located in Echols and Clinch counties, Georgia, principally in Clinch. The-defendant moved to strike out all evidence relating to work done upon other lands than those in Echols county, upon the ground that the same was not included in plaintiff’s bill of particulars. The court ruled that the work could be proven any where else than in Echols county, but “that it must come in under the item of $125.” Therefore under the ruling of the court no recovery could be had except for work, done in surveying land in Echols county, Georgia. [625]*625The plaintiff,, under our liberal rules of amendment, could, if he had desired, have amended his bill of particulars so as to have made the evidence applicable to it. He did not do so, but acquiesced in the ruling of the court. The evidence offered must be confined to the bill of particulars, and, of course, the plaintiff could not prove items not mentioned therein. Robinson vs. Dibble’s Admr., 17 Fla. 457; Hall vs. Sewell, 9 Gill, 146; Harding vs. Griffin, 7 Blackf. 462; Ritter vs. Daniels, 47 Mich. 617.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Fla. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withers-v-sandlin-fla-1895.