79 Ga. 466 | Ga. | 1887
Dyar, having been an agent for selling fertilizers on time for cotton, and for collecting the cotton when due and forwarding it to his principals, settled up with them on July 5th, 1S82, gave his four notes under seal for the balance they claimed, aggregating $356.55, each note concluding with a mortgage upon realty as security for its payment; and the notes having matured, he resisted a
At the trial he was his own principal witness, and most of his testimony being excluded, the j ury found against him. He moved for a new trial on more than twenty grounds, all of which were overruled. Numerous as they are, they are all rooted, at last, in the theory that though the account was closed by settlement, it is still open. The defence, when analyzed, resolves itself into an effort to vary a written contract by parol, and to shun the consequences of gross negligence. If at the time the notes and mortgages were given there was an agreement entered into, that they should be varied by the result of subsequent examination, that agreement ought to have been embodied in the written contract, or in some other writing whereby to establish it. The omission to do either is decisive of this branch of the defence. There is no allegation in the plea, and no indication in the evidence, that this agreement was intended to be embraced in any writing, or that it was left out by fraud or mistake. Its effect, if allowed to have any, would be to overrule the writings executed as the result of the settlement, and to reopen the settlement altogether.
Sawyer vs. Vories, 4-4 Ga. 662; Cutts vs. Johnson, 49 Id. 370; Henderson vs. Thompson, 52 Id. 149; Howard & Soule vs. Stephens, Id. 448; Alston vs. Wingfield, 53 Id. 18; Rodgers vs. Rosser, 57 Id. 319; Wynn, Shannon & Co. vs. Cox, 5 Id. 373 ; Logan vs. Bond, 13 Id. 192; Wyche vs. Winship, Id. 208; Griswold vs. Scott, Id. 210; Gamble vs. Knott et al., 40 Id. 199 ; Newell vs. Stiles, 21 Id. 118; Simmons vs. Martin, 52 Id. 570 ; Delaney vs.
We think there was no material error committed on the trial, and no error at all in denying a new trial. The head-notes shape accurately the points ruled, and are to be taken as a part of this opinion.
A fact of some importance is, that an account taken from .the books of Walton, Whann <fc Co. was introduced by . Dyar at the trial, which account showed the same balance in their favor as that for which the notes and mortgage : were given.
Judgment affirmed.