119 Ga. 280 | Ga. | 1903
The Equitable Mortgage Company sued Mrs. Watson on a promissory note for the sum of $2,472.50 principal, besides interest and attorney’s fees, and prayed for a general judgment and for a special lien upon a certain tract of land whibh it alleged had been conveyed to it as security for the debt.' The defendant filed several pleás, in two of which she alleged that the debt was infected with usury, and, therefore, the security deed was void and the plaintiff was not entitled to the special lien prayed for. Upon a former trial the defendant abandoned all her alleged defenses except that of usury, admitted a prima facie case for the plaintiff, and assumed the burden of showing that the debt, which the deed was given to secure, was infected with usury. Upon that trial the jury found a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the principal and interest of its debt, but found in favor of the defendant upon the plea of usury and against the special lien claimed by the plaintiff. There was a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and the case was brought to this court, where the judgment overruling the motion for a new trial was reversed, this court bolding that “there was no evidence to authorize the finding against the special lien prayed for by the plaintiff.” Equitable Mortgage Co. v. Watson, 116 Ga. 679. In rendering the judgment of reversal, this court gave direction that such judgment should not have the effect of setting aside the verdict in so far as it found in favor of the plaintiff for the principal and interest of its debt, and that the new trial should be had upon two issues only, viz., whether or not the plaintiff was entitled-'to the special lien prayed for ; and, if so, should the judgment include attorney’s fees. Ib. 685. When the case again came on for trial in the lower court, counsel representing the parties agreed, in open court, to
The defendant admitted a prima facie case in favor of the plaintiff,. and assumed the burden of showing that the deed under which the plaintiff claimed the special lien was void because of the existence of usury therein. In our opinion, she failed to establish her plea of usury, and therefore the verdict finding against the special lien is without evidence to support it. When the case was here before, this court held that “ While to support a plea of usury, filed for the purpose of invalidating a deed given to secure a debt, the evidence need not establish the usury with the particularity required when it is sought to recover back or set off the usury, still the evidence must show with certainty that the transaction was tainted with usury.” It also held: “ In a given case, where the lender might reserve a portion of the loan without infecting the transaction with usury, it is incumbent on one who alleges usury to show the exact amount reserved.” See first and second head-notes to the case. So it was then clearly settled that this' was a case in which the lender might have reserved a portion of the loan without infecting the transaction with usury, and that it was incumbent upon the defendant to “show with certainty that the transaction was tainted with usury.” Mr. Justice Cobb, who then delivered the opinion of the court, stated the documentary evidence introduced by the plaintiff and the testimony of Alonzo Richardson, who testified in behalf of the plaintiff, and concluded that this evidence authorized a finding in favor of the plaintiff; and that if there was nothing to contradict this evidence, such a finding was demanded. The evidence which supports the plaintiff’s case in the present record is substantially’the same as that with which Mr. Justice Cobb, speaking for the court, was then dealing. The same documentary evidence was introduced upon this trial, and Richardson again testified substantially as he did before, except that upon this last trial he testified that of the $2,300 received from the Mortgage Company upon the note, the Atlanta Trust & Banking Company received $172.50 and L. L. Ray $115.00 as commissions for procuring the loan for the defendant.
But there is other and undisputed evidence in the case, which shows that she could not personally know what amount of money the Equitable Mortgage Company actually loaned her. From this evidence it appears that she did not deal directly with the Mortgage Company, but, in obtaining the money, she dealt through a chain of agents. The documentary evidence shows that she constituted 'the Atlanta Trust & Banking Company her agent to procure a loan for her of $2,300, for five years, at six per cent, interest, payable annually, to be secured by a mortgage on or a deed to her f-arm, to be made to such person or corporation as the Trust Company might procure to advance the money; that L. L. Bay was her agent in dealing with the Trust Company, and was duly authorized by her to receive the money procured by the Trust Company from the Mortgage Company. Here were two agents
We might well end this opinion here, but the able and ingenious counsel for the defendant in error has earnestly insisted that there is a circumstance, deducible from the evidence in the' case, which shows that the $29 in cash which the defendant testified she received from her husband was in fact all of the amount loaned to her by the Mortgage Company, except the sum used in settling the old loan upon the property. We will state the circumstances
But even admitting that the period for which the counsel calculated the interest was. the correct one, we do not think much importance is to be attached to the result of his figures. At best it raises a mere suspicion that the defendant’s contention may be true, but does not prove that it is true. Let us consider, for a moment, the process of reasoning which must be pursued in order to reach the conclusion that the evidence shows “ with certainty that the transaction was tainted with- usury.” Mrs. Watson, without knowing the amount received .from the Mortgage Company by her agent the Trust Company, without knowing the amount turned over by the Trust Company to her other agent Ray, and without even knowing what amount her husband received for her from Ray, testifies that her husband turned over to her only $29. Inasmuch as this happens to be the exact amount in cash which she ought to have received, if the Mortgage Company had only turned over to her agent, the Trust Company, the $2,012.50 represented by the certificate of deposit and from this the Trust Company and Ray had, respectively, deducted the commissions which Richardson testified they received, and the attorneys representing the holder of the old loan had received in settlement of the same neither more nor less than the exact amount due when the settlement was made, therefore, Mrs. Watson has successfully carried the burden which she assumed, by proving “with certainty” that the transaction between the Mortgage Company and herself “ was tainted with usury.” In our opinion, this reasoning is fallacious. The argument here indicated proceeds upon the theory that because certain proved facts will harmonize perfectly with certain assumed facts, therefore the assumed facts must have occurred. It assumes that the $287.50 of commissions received by the Trust Company and Ray were taken from the $2,012.50 represented by
Judgment reversed.