60 Ga. 654 | Ga. | 1878
The plaintiff sued the defendants on a promissary note for the sum of $300.00 dated 7th of March, 1874, and due 1st of November thereafter, payable to the order of Hunt, Rankin & Lamar, and indorsed in blank by them. The defendants pleaded that said note was given to the payees
It was proved by two witnesses for the plaintiff, that the note was transferred by Hunt, Eankin & Lamar to the plaintiff on the 30th of April, 1874, as collateral security for money loaned by it to them ; the amount advanced by the plaintiff was eighty per cent of the face value of the note, the plaintiff having no notice of any defense thereto. One of the defendants (Butner) stated that after the note became due, one Skellie, who had been the agent of Hunt, Eankin & Lamar in the spring of 1874, and had been collecting for them that fall, called on him for the payment of the note, but did not exhibit the note, supposed he had it. After he was sued on the note, called at the Exchange Bank and told Lawton, its cashier, that he would pay the bank $200.00 as a compromise of the debt. He said he could not take it without first seeing Hunt) Eankin & Lamar about it, and went to their store and saw them, came back and told witness they would not consent to his taking the $200.00 dollars offered. This is all the evidence going to show that the plaintiff was not the bona fide holder of the note before it became due.
Skellie was not the agent of the plaintiff, and therefore its right to the paper could not be affected by what he
Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.