In this appeal, transferred here from the Supreme Court, Baxter and Berry, plaintiffs below, appeal the grant of summary judgment to defendant Georgia Federal Savings & Loan Association (hereafter Georgia Federal) which they had sued for wrongful foreclosure on real estate, held as a security for a loan, contending that payments had been made by them which, while late, were retained by Georgia Federal, thus establishing a quasi new agreement respecting the timeliness of installment payments so that Georgia Federal could not, thereafter, insist on the original terms without first giving "reasonable notice ... of intention to rely on the exact terms of the agreement.” Code § 20-116.
We find this case to be controlled by the Supreme Court’s recent answer to a question certified by this court
(Smith v. General Finance Corp.,
1. Berry’s affidavit stated that "plaintiffs over a course of five (5) years had been late with their loan payments on numerous occasions but had always made the payments on notification by [Georgia Federal] and paid any late charges that had accrued. [P]laintiffs had been led to believe by the actions of [Georgia Federal] and by its course of conduct over a period of years that it would take no action such as foreclosure without giving the plaintiffs a reasonable notice and opportunity to pay any delinquent payments which had always been the policy of [Georgia Federal] in the past.”
Georgia Federal contends that its acceptance of late *754 payments was not a departure from the original terms because it could not accelerate the debt and foreclose the loan until a monthly payment had been in arrears for over a month. However, there is an error of closure in the syllogism since Georgia Federal has not shown that all arrearages were of less than a month, and questions of fact remain as to this issue.
"[E]vidence of the buyer’s repeated, late, irregular payments, which are accepted by the seller, does create a factual dispute as to whether a quasi new agreement was created under Code § 20-116, and a jury question is also raised as to whether the anti-waiver provision in the loan contract was itself waived.” Smith v. General Finance Corp., supra, at p. 501.
Fair v. General Finance Corp.,
We will follow here
Curl v. Federal Savings &c. Assn.,
2. Georgia Federal also contends that it gave plaintiffs notice of its intention to return to the original terms by its insistence that the arrearages be made up. However, we do not deem that inference demanded as a matter of law, but think it just as reasonable for plaintiffs to have concluded that the duns related to amounts due from the past and in the present rather than to time of performance deemed acceptable in the future. The Supreme Court held as much in Curl, supra, and we find *755 this "notice” contention an insufficient basis upon which to affirm the grant of summary judgment in the face of Smith v. General Finance Corp., supra.
Judgment reversed.
