Griffin v. May
Griffin v. May
Opinion of the Court
Suit was brought in the city gourt of Thomas-ville to recover a balance alleged to be due on the purchase-price of a mule. The case was duly set for trial on Monday morning, .January 6, 1919. When the ease was called for trial in its order on that date the defendant was not in court, and his sole counsel, who was present, called the defendant and announced to the court that he was without knowledge as to why the defendant was absent, and was without any information on which to base an application for a continuance or a postponement of the case. The court thereupon ordered the case to trial, and the plaintiff testified in his own behalf, and, there being' no other evidence in the case and no contradiction of the plaintiff’s testimony, the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full .amount sued for, and
fense to the suit of the plaintiff in said case, which defense is fully set forth in the plea of the defendant duly and regularly of file in said case, in said court, and that if deponent could have been present at the said trial he would have testified of his own knowledge to the facts constituting the said. defense. That this deponent was not present at the said trial, as he desired to be and as he endeavored to be, and the sole reason for and cause of his said absence was providential hindrance and circumstances wholly and absolutely beyond the control of this deponent, as follows: During the week before the trial of said case, deponent being in Decatur county, Georgia, on business, between forty and fifty miles ' from Thomasville, and knowing that the said case was assigned for trial on Monday, the 6th day of January, 1919, he started from the town of Jabin, in said county of Decatur, in an automobile to Thomasville on Sunday, the 5th. day of - January, 1919, expecting and having the right to expect, by such means of conveyance, to reach Thomasville, Georgia, before the opening of court on the morning of January 6, 1919. The roads over which deponent were travelling are fair, and by the said means of conveyance it should not have taken and does not usually, take more than two or three hours to make the trip, and but for an unusual and. unexpected occurence deponent so started to. Thomasville in plenty of time to have made the trip three or four times. While on the way, however, and while deponent was still 25 or 30 miles from Thomasville and ten miles from any railroad or any means of any communication with' his counsel or the court before the said case could and would be reached for trial, his said automobile broke down and refused to run, leaving this deponent where it was physically impossible for him to get to the said court in time for the trial of the said case, or communicate with the court
1. In our opinion it is not shown that the defendant, by the exercise of due diligence, could not have arrived at the court before his case was called. The case was not called until Monday morning. Some time on' Sunday, the preceding day (it may have been early Sunday morning), the defendant was within 25 or 30 miles of Thomasville and within 10 miles of a railroad, when his automobile “broke down and refused to run.” It does not affirmatively appear, as it should, that he could not have telephoned from some farm-house, or other place, to the court or his counsel, or that he endeavored to get another conveyance, or a riding animal, from some farm-house or elsewhere, or that he could not have walked the ten miles to the railroad and boarded a train there which would have carried him to Thomasville in
In Wright v. Bank of S. W. Ga., 13 Ga. App. 347 (79 S. E. 184), cited and relied on by counsel for the plaintiff in error, the defendant was unable to attend the court on account of serious illness, the affidavit of her attending physician stating that she was unable to leave her home for any purpose whatever. That case is quite different from the case before us.
2. The direction of the verdict in this case is not excepted to; and the verdict itself being amply authorized by the evidence, the court did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.