24 Ga. App. 408 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1919
This is a suit upon a promissory note. The defendants filed a plea of payment. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendants made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and they excepted.
The sole issue involved in the case is one of payment. The defendants claimed that they had made two payments on the note sued upon. On the other hand, the plaintiff claimed that the principal debtor owed him several hundred dollars, including notes and an account, and that the payments referred to were not made on the note sued upon, but were payments on an account. On the trial the plaintiff-testified that neither one of the defendants had ever paid him anything on the note in question, but that the payments relied upon by the defendants as a defense were made on an account, and so credited on his books. He then introduced in evidence his books showing several items of account due him by the defendant Hamlin. The defendant Hamlin testified that he owed
This was in substance the entire evidence introduced, and it will be observed that there is absolutely no evidence whatever from Hamlin that at the time he received the receipts he made any complaint as to their wording, which showed clearly that they were given for certain payments on an account and not for payments on the note sued upon. Neither is there any evidence showing, or even tending to show, that the plaintiff practiced fraud upon or in any respect exercised any • undue influence over the defendant. Hnder these circumstances the taking of the receipts, which the defendant accepted without complaint and actually held in his possession until ordered to produce them on the trial, was such an acquiescence on his part as to what they contained or recited as to bind him. In Bird v. Benton, 127 Ga. 371 (3), 372 (56 S. E. 450), the Supreme Court approved the following charge to the jury: “If, after directing the application of payments to mule notes, the defendant consented, directly or impliedly, from his acts or words, to a different application of said payments from that
Although it is true that a receipt is not a contract, but merely an admission in writing of the fact of payment or other settlement between debtor and creditor, and, under section 5795 of the Civil Code (1910), it is only prima facie evidence of payment, and is subject to explanation, in this case there was no sufficient explanation showing why the defendant should not be bound by the recitals in the receipts. The court therefore did not err in directing a verdict for the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.