15 Ga. App. 778 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
On August 12, 1913, the American National Bank brought suit in the city court of Atlanta against the Guarantee Trust & Banking Company, alleging itself to be the bona fide holder for value of two certain promissory notes executed by the defendant, payable to the order of F. P. H. Akers, for $3,250 each, and purchased by the plaintiff before maturity. The notes fell due June 6, 1913, and June 6, 1914, respectively, and each contained a stipulation that in the event the first note became due and remained unpaid for 30 days, the other should immediately become due. The first note remained unpaid for more than thirty days after it became due. On July 8, 1913, the plaintiff served
The defendant filed a demurrer, on the grounds: “(1) Said petition sets forth no facts showing that the plaintiff has any special lien upon the property described in the seventh paragraph of said petition. While said petition shows that it is the holder of the notes therein described, it does not show that the plaintiff is the holder of the legal title to the property therein described, or that it holds or owns any lien upon said property which rests upon the notes described in said ¡oetition. (2) Because the claim for attorney’s fees is not shown by said petition to rest upon any lien or claim of title, or title, and [appears] to be in no wise anything but a mere contractual demand against the defendant compan}', and not entitled to be established against said land as a claim entitled to either legal or equitable priority.”
The defendant company, in its own name, and its receivers, J. D. Bobinson and Harold Hirsch, who also appear as defendants, filed an answer admitting the execution and delivery of the notes in question, and alleging that prior to the suit, the defendant company was placed by the superior court of Eulton county in the hands of the receivers, and that no notice of the intention to bring suit was given by the plaintiff to the receivers. It is denied that the plaintiff is entitled to recover attorney’s fees, or to have a special lien established upon the property described in the petition. The defendants further allege that no application for authority to
The plaintiff demurred to the answer generally, on the ground that it set forth no facts constituting, a defense. There were also various special demurrers, but these were not passed upon. The court, after overruling the demurrer to the petition, entered the following order on the demurrer, to the answer: “Paragraph 1 of this demurrer is sustained and the defendants’ plea is stricken.” This judgment striking the answer is the basis of the first exception presented in the writ of error. Thereafter a verdict for principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, and establishing a special lien for these items against the lands described in the petition, was directed, and judgment was entered thereon, and error is assigned upon the ground that the court erred in directing the verdict, and that the judgment was contrary to law.
1. We think the bank was clearly entitled to a purchase-money lien upon the- real estate described in its petition. The petition sets forth specifically the nature and origin of the alleged indebtedness, and exhibits the notes transferred by Akers, in which the defendant declares that they were given for the purchase-money of two described lots on West Peachtree street. These lots are fully described and identified- in the petition. So that, passing for the present other objections (which will be dealt with later), the plaintiff, by virtue of the transfer of the notes, which carried with it all of Akers’s rights as to the security (Civil Code, § 4276), and in accordance with the original contract between the defendant and Akers, was entitled to a lien for the purchase-money of the property identified in the notes, which referred also to the bond for title that the plaintiff alleged had been transferred to it. Civil Code, §§ 3330, 3347, 4276.
2. It is insisted, however) by learned counsel for the plaintiffs in error that even if the plaintiff was entitled to a lien upon the land for the amount of the principal and interest of the note, in no event could the amount of the lien he increased so as to include the attorney’s fees specified in the note. The objection is twofold,— (1) that there is no provision of law by which attorney’s fees can be included so as to carry a lien provided by a contract, except for the principal and interest; and (2) that even- if the defendant
It is insisted, however, that even if the plaintiff in this case was entitled under the rulings in Harris v. Powers, 129 Ga. 86 (58 S. E. 1038, 12 Ann. Cas. 475), and McCall v. Herring, 116 Ga. 239 (42 S. E. 468), to a lien upon the land, these decisions did not hold that the security of the deed extends to the attorney’s fees; and it is argued that no Georgia case can be found in which it is held that attorney’s fees are a part of the purchase-money. A note given for the purchase-money of land may include a stipulation for the payment of attorney’s fees in the event the principal and interest of the note are not paid at its maturity, and in the event of such default, if the holder of the note complies with
3. Under the rulings in Wheatley v. Blalock, 82 Ga. 406 (9 S. E. 168), Young v. Germania Savings Banlc, 5 Ga. App. 130 (62 S. E. 999), and Edenfield v. Bank of Millen, 7 Ga. App. 645 (67 S. E. 896), there is no merit whatever in the argument that the city court of Atlanta is without jurisdiction to establish a lien upon real estate. It is directly held in the Wheatley case, supra, that the establishing of a lien on real estate is not a suit affecting title to land. But it is insisted that the fact that the superior court of Fulton county, in the exercise of its jurisdiction as a court of chancery, had taken charge of the assets of the Guarantee Trust & Banking Company and was administering its assets, and that the allowance of a lien would be an assumption of the superior court’s jurisdiction by the city court, whereas the duty rests upon the superior court to distribute the fund in hand. It is one thing to create a lien, and another thing to determine the priority to which it is entitled; and even if this point had not already been adjudicated in the case ‘of American National Bank v. Robinson, 141 Ga. 78 (80 S. E. 555), we should hold that it would be time enough for the point to be raised before the superior court whenever that judicatory proceeds to render a decree fixing the relative rank of the various claims seeking a distributive part of the fund. We
4. There is not only the exception that the verdict was erroneous because the court was without power and authority to render such a judgment as was rendered, but it is further urged that even if the court was clothed with jurisdiction and a verdict for the plaintiff might have been found by a jury, it was, nevertheless error to direct a verdict. A court can never direct a verdict, unless no other finding can legally be reached than that directed, and a verdict is directed by a court always at its peril. In the present case it must be assumed that the withdrawal of the case from the consideration of the jury and the directing of a finding was harmless, because the particular verdict directed could not have been prevented otherwise than by a lack of evidence on some particular point essential to the plaintiff’s case; for the case is not one in which there is a conflict in the evidence. The court might have rendered a judgment for the principal, interest, and costs; and, under the ruling in Valdosta &c. R. Co. v. Citizens Bank of Valdosta, 14 Ga. App. 329 (80 S. E. 913), the admission of service of the notice of intention to sue would have required the jury to find a verdict for the attorney’s fees. The admission of the execution of the notes, and the admission that the real estate referred to was that described in the petition, required the establishment of the plaintiff’s lien. So there could have been no harmful error in the direction of the verdict.
We decline to grant the motion of the defendant in error for the award of ten per cent, damages for a frivolous appeal in this case, although we are perfectly satisfied that our ruling upon the allowance of a lien upon the real estate for the attorney’s fees specified in the purchase-money notes is correct. We overrule the motion not only because the precise question has not hitherto been directly adjudicated, but also because it does not directly appear from the record that the plaintiff in error in this case filed a supersedeas bond whereby the defendant in error was prevented from proceeding to enforce its judgment, including the lien for attorney’s fees. Judgment affirmed.