130 Ga. 100 | Ga. | 1908
(After stating the facts.)
Conceding that the statement in the mortgage of the particular kind of bond upon which the mortgagee became surety was a part
In the ease of Moses v. Hatfield, 27 S. C. 324 (3 S. E. 538), it was said, “It is contended that the court erred in receiving parol testimony to show what debt the mortgage was really intended to secure. Now, while it is quite true that a written contract can
If the reasoning is sound whereby the conclusion is reached that aliunde evidence may be heard to correct a misdescription of the ■debt in cases where mortgages are given to secure the payment of specific debts, a fortiori such evidence is competent to apply the terms of the contract to the subject-matter thereof in cases like that under consideration. In this case the mortgage was executed under the provisions of the Civil Code, §2733, which declares that “Mortgages may be taken by sureties and guarantees to indemnify them against loss.” In the case at bar the essence of the contract was to make good an agreement of indemnity. The plaintiff in •error, the purchaser of the land described in the mortgage, had record notice that the land was under mortgage to secure that agreement of indemnity, and; having notice of that fact, he was put upon notice of the existence of a subsisting lien upon the property purchased. And, as was said in the case of Jones v. Guaranty & Indemnity Co., supra, “Where there is enough to put those concerned upon inquiry, the means of knowledge and'knowledge itself are in legal effect the same.”
We are satisfied as to the soundness of the conclusion reached in this case, that the mortgage was a good and valid lien as against the purchaser of the property from the mortgagor, and have so held without reference to the principle and to the cases holding that the position or relation of administrators and executors to the estate or property which it becomes their duty to administer is one of trust in the broad sense of that term.
Judgment affirmed.