141 Ga. 364 | Ga. | 1914
In this case Sarah F. Dibble, as administratrix of the estate of Lucy Jane Bruce, and Helen Loomis brought suit against Clara E. Law on a certain promissory note for $1,000 principal, besides interest and attorney’s fees, which was secured by a deed to land. The defendant filed her answer to the petition, averring payment in full of the note to F. L. Seales, at Waynesboro, Georgia, a member of the law firm of Lawson & Scales, who it was claimed were agents of the plaintiffs. A verdict was rendered for the defendant. To the judgment of the court, overruling a motion for a new trial, the plaintiffs excepted.
The controlling question in the case is whether the amount due
It is insisted that it was the custom to send the interest coupons of the notes to Lawson & Scales.for collection, and that they did collect them from the defendant and forwarded the interest so collected; and that therefore the defendant had the right to pay the principal to Lawson & Scales. The record shows that some of the coupons were in the hands of George W. Moore & Co. for collection, and that the remittances were made to Moore & Co., who were the agents of Lawson & Seales to secure money for their-clients; but it nowhere appears that the plaintiffs knew that the coupons were sent to Lawson & Seales for collection, or that the remittances were made directly to the plaintiffs, or that they knew that Lawson & Scales were collecting the coupons, or that the plaintiffs ratified the act. There is no proof of agency in Lawson & Scales to collect. On the contrary, the plaintiff Mrs. Loomis testifies that she did not know Lawson & Scales in the transaction at all. She never had any dealings with either of them, or as a firm. The interest coupons due May 1, 1905, November 1, 1905, and May 1, 1906, were deposited at the Berkshire Loan & Trust Co., of- Pittsfield, Mass., and credited to plaintiffs’ account.- How they were collected the plaintiff does not know. The interest coupons due May 1, and November 1, 1907, and May 1, 1908, were presented to and paid by the chebk of George W. Moore & Co., of Hartford, Conn. There is no evidence to show that the interest coupons were sent by the plaintiffs to Lawson & Seales; but if it be assumed that it was the custom of George W. Moore &. Co. to send the interest coupons to Lawson & Scales for collection and they did collect the interest coupons, that custom was broken when the plaintiffs sent the mort-, gage deed and note to others than Lawson & Seales for collection of the principal and interest.- It can not be said, because Lawson & Scales collected the coupons without the knowledge of the plaintiffs, that therefore they had the right to collect the principal debt also.
Judgment reversed.