140 Ga. 594 | Ga. | 1913
1. The general grounds are not referred to in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, and will be treated as abandoned.
2. The fourth, fifth, and sixth grounds of the amended motion for new trial complain of the admission of the testimony of the defendant, to the effect that the company guaranteed him a specified dividend, and if it was not paid his note would be returned, and that if he became dissatisfied at any time before the note became due, the company would return his note and take up the stock. The objection urged to the admissibility of the testimony was that it was irrelevant and sought to vary the terms expressed in the' note. The note was an unconditional promise to pay a specified sum for value received, and apparently expressed the entire agreement between the parties. The testimony would in effect engraft conditions upon it which would materially change the contract, and there was no pleading or evidence that the conditions thus sought to be engrafted were intended to be put in the note and were omitted therefrom through fraud or mistake. It was erroneous, therefore, to admit the evidence. Smith v. Baker, 137 Ga. 298 (72 S. E. 1093) L. & N. R. Co. v. Willbanks, 133 Ga. 15 (65 S. E. 86, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 374, 17 Ann. Cas. 860).
3. The seventh and eighth grounds complain that the court erred in admitting the depositions of designated witnesses, over objection made by plaintiff’s attorney, which was that the depositions were taken without giving the plaintiff the five days notice as required by section 5910 of the Civil Code. The notice was given on the 19th, and it appointed the 23d day of the same month for taking the depositions of witnesses. It thus appears that the statute was not complied with. The plaintiff, being the party notified, did not waive the point, but made objection to the taking of
4. The next three grounds complain of the admission of evidence which tended to show that the TJlaca Company did not have on hand at any time as much money as defendant testified the agents of the company represented to him the company had at the time he took the stock and gave his note. The objection to this testimony was that it was irrelevant. The twelfth ground complains of the court’s ruling in allowing the defendant to testify as to the circumstances under which he was induced to give the note. He testified that the agent of the company represented to him: that the. company was organized at one hundred thousand dollars capital stock, and had about forty or fifty thousand dollars to do business on, that this amount was in cash in the treasury, that there were several men that he (the agent) wished to become stockholders, including defendant, so that he would get stock scattered throughout north Georgia in order to strengthen the influence of the corporation, and that designated persons were directors; and in response to the question of how much stock any one person could hold, the agent replied to the defendant, “Not over $6,500.” As to the effect that the statement that designated persons were stockholders had on the defendant, “that was one of the main points why [he] agreed to take the stock.’’ This evidence was objected to on the ground that it did not show fraud in the procurement of the note, and that it was in conflict with the terms of the note, and sought to vary the contract between the parties. When considered in connection with other evidence in the case, to the effect that the Hlaca Company did not have the amount of money which the agent represented to defendant, and that the persons designated ’as directors were not such,.and that the defendant was induced to take the stock and execute the note on the strength of such representations, the objection to the evidence was not well founded.
5. The thirteenth ground of the amended motion complains that the judge charged the following: “How, if you believe that the circumstances under which this note was bought by the bank were sufficient to put the bank on notice that these defenses existed, and if you believe that the bank by proper inquiry could have de
The plaintiff being holder for value, and there being no evidence to show that it took the note with, notice of fraud perpetrated on the maker by the agent of the payee, or evidence to charge notice of such fraud, it was error to charge on the subject. Civil Code, §§ 4288, 4291; Morrison v. Hart, 122 Ga. 660 (50 S. E. 471); Oliver v. Miller, 130 Ga. 72 (60 S. E. 254). This ruling disposes also of the 14th and 15th grounds of the motion for new -.trial, which complain of the charge of fraud, and notice thereof.
Judgment reversed.