Olliff & Co. brought suit in a justice’s court upon a promissory note signed by Grooms, indorsed by Outland, and payable to Donalson or bearer. The defendants pleaded that the note ivas procured by fraud, for that-it was given for the purchase of a mare sold to Grooms by one Warters, who represented that the animal was perfectly sound in every respect, when in point of fact she was, both before and at the tiriie of the purchase,
The judgment of the court below was right. The plea of the defendants was really a plea of failure of consideration. Although it, in substance, alleges that Warters fraudulently procured the defendant Grooms to sign the note by falsely representing that the mare was sound, when in fact she was not, in its essence it simply means that the note was given for a worthless animal, and therefore that there was a total failure of consideration. It very often happens that the eonsidertion of a promissory note totally fails because of fraud on the part of the person to whom, or at whose instance, the note is given; but the mere fact that a fraud is thus practiced does not change the real nature of the defence.
This court, in Robenson v. Vason et al., 87 Ga. 66, construed the above cited section of the code, and held that fraud in the procurement of a note, as therein specified, meant fraud in the procurement by the holder thereof, and not fraud in the procurement of the note as between the original parties, of which the holder for value had no notice. This ruling was followed in Bealle v. The Southern Bank of Georgia, 57 Ga. 274; but on page 276, Judge Jackson said: “ We admit that such a construction does not appear to us at all clear, or even satisfactory ; and the whole subject needs legislation.” Counsel for the plaintiffs in error' sought to question the soundness of these cases. Whether sound or not is immaterial to the present controversy, they really being inapplicable to the question at issue. The fraud referred to in section 2785 of the code does not mean fraud practiced in inducing one to enter into a contract which results in the making and signing of a promissory note or other negotiable instrument, but fraud in obtaining possession of such a paper in the hands of another by procuring or inducing the latter, whether the maker or a third person, to part with it. Fraudulently inducing a person to sign his name to a paper and to willingly deliver it is quite a different thing from fraudulently obtaining from that person the possession of a paper already signed and in existence. If, for instance, one should make and execute a promissory note, intending not to deliver it except in a certain contingency, and another should fraudulently get possession of the note before the contingency arose, this would be a case of fraud in the procurement of the note. Another instance