65 Ga. 221 | Ga. | 1880
Lewis, as executor of Spivey, sued himself and Alfred .Haywood as administrators of Joseph M. Haywood, and Alfred Haywood as indorser, on three promisspry 'notes, made by Joseph M., payable to the order of Alfred and indorsed by him, one for $r,200.00, dated June the 9th, 1870, and payable at sixty days, one for $1,500.00, dated June the 20th, 1879, and payable at thirty days, and the -other for $1,300.00, dated August the 1st, 1870, and paya
The jury found for the plaintiff $3,677.70, with interest: from May 10th, 1873, and thereupon Alfred Haywood,., the only defendant left, moved for a new trial on sundry-grounds. The motion was overruled on all of them, and. he excepted.
The case of the plaintiff was made out when he pro-, duced the notes with the indorsement of defendant thereon, and it was the duty of the jury to find for him the amount therein set out, unless defendant showed a. legal reason to the contrary. This he attempts to do by-five pleas, and he must offer the proof to support them..
1. The fourth and fifth are not supported, because there-is not a scintilla of evidence that the conveyance was ever-delivered to the plaintiff, Lewis, by Haywood, or the property mentioned therein turned over to him. Therefore-these notes could not have been satisfied by the property which Lewis never received, nor could any conduct of his-in failing to record the conveyance which was never delivered to him, have increased the indorser’s risk. Unless-he got possession of it he could not record it. So there is nothing in the defense set up in the fourth and fifth, pleas.
2. If the intestate had paid the notes in money in his life
3. But it is said that the administrators paid .them after Joseph M’s death. The defendant, Alfred Haywood, was one of these administrators. He was sworn as a witness in the case, and did not swear that he paid them, or any part of them. The only other administrator is the plaintiff, Lewis, who was also a witness, and testified most positively that he did not pay them, or any part thereof, but that they stood open and unpaid. There is, therefore, no evidence directly showing that either administrator paid them, and the second plea is not sustained by the proof.
But on this plea it is argued that error was committed by the court in ruling out the entries in a book produced by Bender, the clerk or manager of the barber-shop and store after Joseph M. Haywood’s death, which entries
4. This leaves but one other plea, to-wit: the plea of usury. It is insisted that by the application of the usurious interest received by Lewis for the Spivey estate to the principal and legal interest of the notes, they would be paid off, or largely reduced. The jury did allow some reduction therefor. The charge of the court restricted their consideration of usury to the notes sued on—it confined the application of usury paid by Joseph M. Haywood in life on these notes to these notes—excluding from their consideration all which had been paid on. other notes of which the record shows a long list. By reference to the plea of the defendant, Haywood, it will be seen that the charge of the court gave him all the usury which his plea asked for. That plea is that “plaintiff has from time to time charged and received as interest on the sums of money in said declaration mentioned, interest at
In this view, it becomes unnecessary to consider the points made in regard to these notes being separate and distinct from others in the plaintiff’s hands, or linked with them in one transaction, so as to have usury on any of the rest allowed on these, and applied pro tanto to their extinguishment.
Whether the court -was right or wrong on these questions in the charges made, or modified, or refused, as questions of law on a case made by the pleadings, it is enough that this plea only makes the one defense that the usurious interest paid on these notes has not been credited on them; and this usury the charge directed the jury so to credit as asked for by the plea. The defendant got what he asked ; he ought not to claim more.
The questions of fact, the ciphering and the calculations, have been made by the jury—the law applicable to the pleadings has been correctly given on all matters vital to the issues made, the presiding judge approves what has been done by the jury, there is evidence to support their finding, and his approval thereof, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.