15 Ga. App. 69 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
1. In the motion for a new trial error is assigned upon the refusal of the court to grant a nonsuit upon the motion of the defendants’ counsel, at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony. As was held in Atlantic Coast Line Ry. Co. v. Blalock,
2. We shall not consider the several grounds of the motion for a new trial in the order in which they are presented, but will deal first with the assignment of error in which complaint is ma.de that one of the jurors was disqualified from sitting in the case. We shall treat the ease in this order because it has frequently been held by this court and by the Supreme Court that a trial by jurors not entitled to sit in the cause is in law no trial. Smith v. State, 2 Ga. App. 574 (59 S. E. 311); Georgia R. Co. v. Cole, 73 Ga. 713 (2). In the case now before us, Pittman, one of the jurors, was a brother-in-law of Boyd, one of the members of the partnership of Carr, Boyd & Company, which firm were stockholders in the Maysville Guano Company at the time of the purchase of the guano which was the consideration of the note sued on. It is insisted by learned counsel for the defendant in error that the test as to the disqualification of a juror is to be applied only at the time of the trial. In other
3. One of the main questions presented in the trial of the case concerns the plea of payment and the propriety of the application of a payment shown to have been made to Mr. Carr, who was acting either in behalf of Carr, Boyd & Company or of the plaintiff guano company, of which he was president. The defendant R. C. Henderson delivered to Mr. Carr live stock of the approximate value of $1,700, after the admitted indebtedness for guano had been created. The evidence is in dispute as to whether direction that the payment be applied upon the debt due the plaintiff was given at the time the stock was delivered to Carr, or at a time when the payment had already been appropriated to the debt to Carr, Boyd & Company, but there is no dispute that ohe of the defendants gave such direction before any proceedings in bankruptcy, and, so far as appears, before the maturity of the indebtedness due to Carr, Boyd & Company. The record does not disclose the amount of the indebtedness of the defendants to Carr, Boyd & Company. The simple question raised, therefore, is: Does a defendant, by proving the payment of a sum sufficient to discharge an outstanding obligation, payment of which is demanded, shift upon the plaintiff, when the plaintiff claims that the payment was appropriated to the satisfaction of another debt of the defendant, the burden of showing the nature and amount of the indebtedness, and that the plaintiff was entitled so to apply it in the absence of any direction on the part of the debtor ? It is not contended by the plaintiff in this case that the defendant R. C. Henderson directed that the live stock delivered by him to Mr. Carr be appropriated as a payment upon the indebtedness to Carr, Boyd & Company; but it is claimed that the proceeds of the sale of the live stock were appropriated by Carr to that indebtedness in the absence of any direction, and in the creditor’s exercise of his option of applying the payment to either of two debts in the absence of direction by the debtor.
It is to be questioned whether the payment in this case falls under the rule as to the application of a payment made by a debtor to a creditor having two or more demands, as laid down in section 4316
Furthermore, it was error to refuse to charge, in substance, the principle stated in the defendants’ request for instructions that the plaintiff could not rebut the defendants’ evidence as to the payment by proof that the payment had been appropriated to the satisfaction of the debt to Carr, Boyd & Company, unless it was made to appear that there was indebtedness of the defendants to Carr, Boyd & Company, and that this indebtedness was sufficient in amount to have absorbed the entire payment. The defendants having shown that they had paid enough to discharge the debt to the guano company, and this fact being undisputed, the testimony of the dual agent, Mr. Carr, to the effect that, though authorized to collect for the guano company, he had appropriated the payment to the demand of Carr, Boyd & Company, was not sufficient to relieve the plaintiff from the legal consequence of the payment to its agent, unless the plaintiff further made it to appear that this payment made to its agent, although he was also the agent of another party, was not misappropriated, but was legally appropriated upon another demand. It would have been necessary to show the amount and maturity of the account of Carr, Boyd & Company, and that the plaintiff’s agent did not misappropriate the fund. To illustrate the proposition: If Henderson had paid Carr, who was the agent of the guano company, and known by the debtor to be such, $1,700, sufficient to discharge the plaintiff’s claim, and Carr had misappropriated the money, the payment would be good and the debt would be discharged. Therefore, when the defendants show a payment to one authorized to collect it for the plaintiff, it is the duty
4. It is well settled, of course, that books of account áre primary proof of their contents, and that oral declarations as to entries therein are inadmissible where the books themselves are accessible. For that reason the ruling in the 4th headnote needs no elaboration.
5. The court erred in the following charge to the jury, upon which error is assigned: “So when you determine whether or not there was a partnership, you have solved the whole question in this case.” This was erroneous because the question of partnership was not involved, for neither defendant had filed a plea under oath denying partnership. But even had the question of partnership been involved, the language used had the effect of withdrawing other issues from the consideration of the jury, by confining them to this single issue, and was for that reason erroneous. If the jury, in conformity with the instructions' of the judge, confined themselves solely to the question whether the Hendersons were partners, they were compelled to overlook the far more important question to which we have already referred in the second division of this opinion.
6. Under the evidence submitted in the trial now under review, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. To have entitled the plaintiff to recover on the theory that the payment made to Mr. Carr had been applied by him in the exercise of his option as a creditor holding two demands against the debtor, it would have been necessary to establish the existence of two demands, whereas only one of them was proved. The debtor has the first right to direct the application of a payment, where there are several demands against him, and it is only when such direction is omitted that the appropriation of the payment can be made by his creditor. The application of payments may be directed by the debtor, or be made by the creditor, or by law, based upon the presumed intention of the debtor. In the application of every payment, however, whether by express direction by the debtor, or by the creditor, or by law, the-application is presumed to be made in accordance with the debtor’s
Judgment reversed.