161 Ga. 204 | Ga. | 1925
This case was taken to the Court of Appeals by direct bill of exceptions. The brief of evidence showed that certain evidence was admitted over stated objections, as follows: “The plaintiff in error (plaintiff below) objected to and moved to rule out all of the testimony of Bedmond in so far as it affects the bank, on the ground that any of the evidence about Project No. 9, as hereinbefore set out, is not a liquidated claim against Graves or the Graves Machinery Co., and that such items, if true, were not a defense against the notes in the hands of a bona fide purchaser after maturity, the defendant specifying that the evidence which he had reference to was only that which was introduced in support of the defense set out in the second sheet of the answer. The court stated that he understood the motion to be on the ground
The Court of Appeals held: “In a suit by the holder of a negotiable paper, received after its maturity, the maker of the paper may set off damages, although unliquidated, for a breach of a contract by the original payee.” The above decision of the Court of Appeals was evidently predicated upon the idea that they would not consider the assignment of error made by the plaintiff in error, as set out in the foregoing division of this opinion. Of course, having failed to consider that assignment of error, the conclusion reached by the Court of. Appeals was correct; but as we have held in the first division of the opinion that the Court of Appeals should have considered that assignment of error, we reach the conclusion that they erred in holding as they did. The Civil Code (1910), § 4344, provides that “When a negotiable paper is sued on by a holder or indorsee, received under dishonor, no set-off is allowed against the original payee, except such as is in some way connected with the debt sued on, or the transaction out of which it sprung.” As early as the case of Tinsley v. Bell, 2 Ga. 134, this court held: “The maker of a promissory note, in an action by the indorsee who received it after due, can not set off a demand against the payee, unless such demand is connected with, or grew out of, the original transaction for which the note was given, or attaches to the note itself; he can not set off a demand arising out of collateral matters. . . To authorize a defendant to set off a demand under the 24th section of the judiciary act of 1799, such demand must be ¿gainst the plaintiff in the action.” In Kinard v. Sanford, 64 Ga. 630, it was held: “A plea of set-off should state the defendant’s demand as distinctly as though he were the plain
In this case it appears that in the written contract for the purchase of machinery, for which notes wére given, one of the notes was the foundation of the action here, and plaintiff had received it after maturity and under dishonor, and the only damages sought to be set off by the payee against this note were damages flowing from a different contract between the payee and the maker of the note, which had no relation to the contract of purchase of the machinery. That being so, such damages could not be set off against the note in the hands of the plaintiff. It follows that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the maker of the paper sued on could set off damages against the transferee, for a breach of a contract by the original payee.
Judgment reversed.