157 Ga. 695 | Ga. | 1924
Lead Opinion
The Habersham Bank brought suit against Mrs. M. A. Merritt upon a promissory note, and prayed that the judgment thereon should be a special lien upon land conveyed by a deed to secure the payment of the note. The defendant admitted the execution of the note and deed, and that the bank was the owner and holder of the note; but pleaded that the note and deed were executed under duress; that she was at Cornelia, Habersham County, Georgia, visiting her daughter, who was quite ill; that on her arrival at Cornelia, Hamilton Kimsey, Esq., an attorney at law, came to her and represented to her that her son-in-law, Maxwell, was short in his accounts as postmaster at Cornelia; that she went to the office of Kimsey, where the note and deed were prepared for her signature; that defendant being herself sick and worried over the condition of her daughter, and upon representations by Kimsey that it was necessary for defendant to execute the note and deed in order to prevent the arrest and imprisonment of her son-in-law on the alleged charge of embezzlement as postmaster, she signed the note and deed; that the consideration of the note is illegal, and the note and deed are void for that reason, that Bobinson was the vice-president of the Habersham Bank, and was one of the sureties on the bond of Maxwell as postmaster; and that the defendant’s daughter, the wife of Maxwell, was in such a condition that his arrest and incarceration would put in jeopardy her health and life. There were other pleas, but only the issue of duress was submitted by the court in his charge to the jury. The jury trying the case returned a verdict for the defendant; and the plaintiff made a motion for new trial, which was overruled.
Regardless of the question as to whether Kimsey as an attorney at law represented Maxwell or Robinson, it is clear that the jury were authorized to find that Mrs. Merritt signed the papers in question under the fear that her son-in-law would be arrested and incarcerated ; and from the testimony of Mrs. Merritt they would be authorized to find that she signed the note under the compulsion aris
The briePsummary which we have given of a part of the evidence and the extracts from the testimony of two of the witnesses are sufficient !(' show, when considered in the light of the authorities quoted and referred to, that the jury were authorized to find that the defendant in this case executed the note and deed in question under such duress as to render the consideration of the contract illegal and the contract void.
When we consider further that J. A. Bobinson, the vice-president of the bank, was a surety on the bond of Maxwell, the postmaster, and liable to make good the amount of his shortage, we cannot escape the conclusion that when he acquired the knowledge of the facts that affected the validity of the note and security deed he was acting in his individual capacity for the protection of his own interest. And where one who is an officer of a bank and engages in a transaction like this, — without imputing to him any wrong intention, he must be regarded as one who is taking care of his own interest and acting to protect his financial welfare, and in liis dealings with the bank in procuring the money on the note and security he was acting for himself and at arm’s length with the bank. In the case of Peoples Bank v. Exchange Bank, 116 Ga. 820 (43 S. E. 269, 94 Am. St. R. 144), it was said: “A corporation is not to be charged with notice of facts of which its president acquires knowledge while dealing in his capacity and in his own behalf with third persons; nor is knowledge on his part thus acquired imputable to the corporation when, acting through another official, it deals with him at arm’s length as with any other individual representing himself alone.” In the case of Union City Realty Co. v. Wright, 145 Ga. 730 (89 S. E. 822), it was held that in dealing with the corporation a ven.dor (an officer of the bank) was acting in his own interest as opposed to that of the corporation; “and his knowledge as to the misrepre
Judgment reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result reached by the court in this case. I do not agree with the view of the majority that the defense of duress was made out against the bank; and for this reason I am of the opinion that a verdict was demanded in favor of the bank upon the issue of duress. I agree with the conclusion reached by the court, that, even if there were duress, there was no evidence to connect the bank with it. I am authorized to say that Justice Atkinson agrees to what is said above.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I dissent because I think the judgment of the lower court refusing a new trial should be affirmed. I concur in the main with the view of Mr. Presiding Justice Beck as to the law of duress. I agree that no amount of duress exercised or operative upon Mrs. Merritt could affect the plaintiff unless knowledge, or sufficient notice to put the bank on inquiry, of this duress was brought home to the bank. Whether or not this is true is a question of fact; and I think that the circumstances submitted to the jury in this case were sufficient to authorize their finding upon this subject.