46 Ga. App. 749 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1933
Two cases, involving the same parties, similar instruments, the same facts and circumstances, and the same questions, are presented to the court and may be determined together. In each of the two chattel-mortgage foreclosures, the defendant’s
In one case the mortgagee and payee of the note demurred generally and specially to the affidavit of illegality, and in the other made an oral motion to strike and dismiss, upon the grounds that the affidavit set forth no defense or reason why the mortgage fi. fa. was proceeding illegally, that the negotiable-instruments law had no application to a mortgage, and that no alteration was shown that would render the instrument void'. Error is assigned on the judgments sustaining the demurrer and the motion and dismissing each of the affidavits of illegality.
1. The fact that a note, in form negotiable, contains on its face a reference to collateral security for the payment thereof, or that it is secured by a mortgage on real or personal property, does not destroy its negotiability. 8 C. J. 127, § 221.
2. While there are adjudications from a number of States that any provision in a note secured by a mortgage, to the effect that, if the maker shall do any act impairing the value of the security, the mortgagee may at once collect the note and foreclose the mortgage,
3. Under the foregoing rules, the obligations involved were negotiable instruments.
4. The general law now of force in this State (Civil Code of 1910, § 4296) provides that “if a written contract be altered intentionally, and in a material part thereof, by a person claiming a benefit under it, with intent to defraud the other party, such alteration voids the whole contract, at the option of the other party.” What constitutes a material alteration of a negotiable instrument is determined, however, not by the provisions of the general law just stated, but by -the provisions of the negotiable-instruments law defining as a material alteration “any other change or addition which alters the effect of the instrument in any respect.” Ga. L. 1924, p. 151, sec. 125 (Michie's Code of 1926, § 4294(125)); Beutel's Bran-nan's Neg. Instr. Law (5th ed.), 964, 971, §§ 124, 125.
5. The rule of the common law as to what constituted an alteration which would avoid the contract was very strict. It was indiscriminately punitive, and did not attempt to adjust the consequences of the act according to the justice and propriety of any particular case. Accordingly, previous to the adoption of the code, an instrument was voided not only by a material and fraudulent alteration by a party claiming a benefit thereunder, but even by an alter
6. The case of International Harvester Co. v. Davis, 13 Ga. App. 1 (78 S. E. 770), was determined prior to the adoption of the negotiable-instruments law, and under the provisions of code-section 4296, which then controlled all contracts negotiable and otherwise. It holds in effect that, under the statute governing that decision, in order to vitiate the instrument, the alteration must not only have been material, but must have been made with “intent to defraud.” The theory of that case was that the addition of an official subscribing witness was not material, nor could it have been made with “ intent to defraud,” since the execution of the mortgage was in fact admitted. The statutory element of fraud with intent to injure thus controlled that decision.
7. The rule under the negotiable-instruments law, as already stated, is different. There “any change or addition which alters the effect of the instrument in any respect” is a material alteration. “The rule supported by the weight of authority is, that if the legal import and effect of the instrument is in fact changed, it does not matter how trivial the change may be, or whether it may be beneficial or detrimental to the party sought to be charged on the contract, as where it changes the evidence or mode of proof;” that “where the addition of an attesting witness to an instrument has the effect of extending liability under the statute of limitations, or of facilitating or interfering in any manner with the proof of the execution of the instrument, the procuring of a witness to sign as an attesting witness after the execution of the instrument, without the consent of the maker, is material and constitutes an alteration.” 2 C. J. 1174 (§ 4), 1207 (§ 58). That the alteration was fraudulently made for the purpose of causing actual injury, or that it did bring about an injury, is not the test of materiality. It is equally
8. Under the law of this State, in order for a written instrument to be introduced in evidence, “the subscribing witness must be produced in all cases” except those falling within the express statutory exceptions. Civil Code (1910), § 5833. In Alabama, where a similar statute existed, and the name of a subscribing witness was added, as was alleged to have been done in thé instant case, even without fraudulent intent, the Supreme Court, in the case of White Sewing Machine Co. v. Saxon, 121 Ala. 199 (25 So. 784), said, that “upon the general principle that any alteration is material which changes the effect and operation of the contract on the face of the paper, either by modifying original stipulations or by adding new ones express or implied, it would seem clear that the addition of an attestation, which imports the agreement of the parties upon and selection by them of a person to be the repository of the proof of execution and of the surrounding circumstances, and under our laws, has the effect of requiring the attesting witness to be called to prove execution, and of authorizing execution to be proved if he be dead or beyond seas by proving his signature, materially affects the status and rights of the parties under the contract; and, as has been often said by this court, it is of no consequence whether the alteration if allowed to operate would be beneficial or detrimental to the party sought to be charged on the contract; the important question is not that, but whether the integrity and identity of the contract has been changed.” See also Shiffer v. Mosier, 225 Pa. 552 (74 Atl. 426, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1155, 1158, notes); Swank v. Kaufman, 255 Pa. 316 (99 Atl. 1000, L. R. A. 1917D, 826, 828, notes); Carson v. Woods (Mo.), 177 S. W. 623; Yancey v. Denham, 211 Ala. 138 (99 So. 851); Homer v. Wallis,
9. It was therefore error to strike and dismiss the defendant’s affidavits of illegality, setting up that the instruments sought to be foreclosed had been voided by the addition of the names of two witnesses, one a notary public.
Judgments reversed.