112 Ga. 617 | Ga. | 1901
The facts of this case are numerous and complicated. A full statement of them is not essential. The following sufficiently sets forth all that is material to an understanding of the rulings announced in the headnotes: It appears from the record that Collins and others purchased a tract of land near Atlanta, containing about 86 acres, from Mrs. Bartlett for $12,900, paying one third of the purchase-money and taking from her a bond to make a title to them upon the payment of the balance. At their suggestion a corporation known as the "Westminster Land Company, composed of the plaintiffs and others, was formed to purchase this land with a view to dividing it into lots and selling the same on speculation. Collins and his associates falsely and fraudulently represented to the subscribers for the stock of this company that they were obtaining the land at the price for which the promoters had purchased it. In the belief that this was so, and upon the assurance that they were “ getting in on the ground floor,” the plaintiffs signed subscriptions to the stock. In point of fact, the promotors were “ unloading” the land upon the company at the price of $36,800. Each of the plaintiffs paid down one third of the amount of his subscription, and for the remaining two thirds executed and delivered to Collins and his associates promissory notes due, respectively, one and two years after date. Collins undertook to sell these notes to the Bank of the State of Georgia, and after some negotiations with E. M. Coker Sr., the president of the bank, Collins procured from the Land Company two notes, covering the balance of the $36,800 remaining due for the land after the making of the cash payments by the stockholders, and subsequently sold the two large notes to the Bank, at the same time depositing therewith as collateral security the notes of the stockholders above mentioned. Before the Bank advanced to Collins the price agreed upon for the Land Company’s notes, Mrs. Bartlett had conveyed the land to Collins and his associates, who, in turn, conveyed the same to the Bank as further security for the payment of the company’s notes. These deeds were promptly recorded, and the Bank executed a bond conditioned to make a title to the company upon the payment of its notes. After these transactions years elapsed, during the progress of which the Bank made divers collections upon
Undoubtedly the Bank, before purchasing the notes, must have known that Collins and his associates had bargained the land to the company for nearly three times the price at which it had been sold to them by Mrs. Bartlett. The Bank also knew that she had not conveyed the land to the company, but directly to the promoters. We are confident, however, that mere knowledge of these facts was not sufficient to constrain a finding by the auditor that the Bank was not an innocent purchaser of the notes, in the face of Coker’s positive and un controverted testimony directly supporting every material allegation of the Bank’s answer. To say the least of it,
Judgment affirmed.