Consolidated Engineering Co. of Georgia, Inc. v. U. I. R. Contractors, Inc.

Evans, Judge,

dissenting.

Consolidated Engineering Company of Georgia, Inc. contracted with U. I. R. Contractors, Inc., for the construction of a building, and at the conclusion a difference arose between the parties as to whether the work had been properly done. U. I. R., as plaintiff, sued Consolidated, as defendant, for the amount alleged to be due under the contract, and Consolidated, as defendant, filed an answer and counterclaim, setting forth that the work had not been properly done and that it did not owe the entire amount sued for; that it was going to cost defendant a considerable amount of money to have the work properly done. Both parties agreed to try the case before the judge without a jury, and at the conclusion a judgment was rendered in plaintiffs favor for the balance alleged to be due by defendant, to wit, $5,000 principal, plus $495.72 interest. Defendant appealed to this court and the majority opinion affirms.

1. A reading of the transcript seems to leave it beyond question that repairs were needed when plaintiff finished the job, in order to make the building serviceable, including great leakage in the roof.

2. But the majority opinion proceeds on the theory that defendant sought to prove the amount of his damages by oral testimony, and did not bring canceled checks and vouchers to court. The majority opinion admits that where secondary evidence is offered without objection it has probative value, and cites Knox Metal Products Inc. v. Watson, 100 Ga. App. 832 (112 SE2d 295). There was no objection here to the defendant’s oral testimony.

3. But the majority opinion urges that where the *926case is a "bench trial” the judge may properly refuse to consider the evidence in support of a party’s claim to damages (where the highest and best evidence is not introduced). Obviously, that statement means the trial judge may or he may not consider such secondary evidence. The trial judge made no ruling when this evidence was introduced and never suggested he would not consider it. This judgment (R. 21) on this point states: "Defendant has produced no evidence before this court to sustain its counterclaim in the amount of $2,000.” It must be noted that the trial judge did not say that no "proper evidence,” or that no "admissible evidence” had been introduced; or that he was refusing to consider the evidence introduced under his discretion so to do (if indeed he has any such discretion after having admitted the evidence without objection), but he simply stated that defendant "has produced no evidence.” That was an erroneous statement because defendant had produced much evidence on this question of damages. And before we leave this point, the majority opinion points to no decision which gives the judge, sitting without a jury, any greater discretion in refusing to consider secondary evidence offered without objection, than a jury would have to refuse to consider such evidence. Once it is introduced without objection, both judge and jury must consider it, and his statement that defendant had produced no evidence to prove the $2,000 damages is simply erroneous and contra to the transcript in this case.

4. But to go one step further, there was ample first-class documentary evidence introduced to prove defendant’s damages. The transcript at pages 112 — 120 shows various documents introduced as exhibits. We particularly call attention to the document on page 114 where Williams Bros. Roofing Co., Inc., on August 21, 1974, made a written proposal to repair or re-roof the freezer for $4,130. On page 115 a letter from Consolidated Engineering Company is shown asking the Charles W. Kester Company to send statement , as to the amount Consolidated would owe because of repairs needed to be done by Kester "about the freezer” as it was anxious to get the matter finally settled. The next three pages show a continuance of correspondence between these parties as to *927this work and finally at page 120 it is shown that the cooler roof is now leaking in four places, although repaired three times with no success and would not be satisfactory until roof was completely redone.

5. On the question of the majority opinion’s statement that the damages must be proven with exactitude, and not left to conjecture, we refer to Code § 20-1409 which provides that in every case as to breach of contract, if one party does not show actual damages, he can recover nominal damages. At the very least, in this case, a judgment for nominal damages and costs should have been rendered in defendant’s favor on its counterclaim.

6. Because of all of the foregoing, I respectfully dissent in this case, and would vote to reverse the judgment of the trial court in failing to award damages on defendant’s counterclaim.