Herrman & Henican brought suit against George W. De LaPerriere (which suit at the time of the trial of
This is the third appearance- of this case in this court. On the first appearance (41 Ga. App. 60,
While there is no presumption that the face value or the market value of stock is its real value, there was a presumption at the beginning of this case that this stock, at the time of the sale, was worth $2500, because this was the amount fixed in the contract of
Under the pleadings and the evidence it is necessary only to ascertain whether there was any evidence to authorize the jury to find that the stock was worthless on the day of the sale and at the time of delivery of the stock, and that therefore the sale was without consideration. D. C. Finney, a man in the cotton business who came in April, 1927, and investigated “the machinery, and land, and mill, and village, and accounts receivable, and bills payable, and bonds,” -testified in part as follows: “As to the actual value of the property on the date of that return, from my viewpoint I wouldn’t give anything for it. I regard it as worthless. I have been in the cotton business for more or less for twenty years. . . After I had gone over all of that [report on liabilities and assets of the cotton mill] my opinion frankly was that the mill was not really worth anything. . . Personally I did not regard it as having any value. . . It came nearer being worth something in August than it was back in November, 1926 [the time of the sale and of the delivery of the stock].” (Italics ours). The terms “actual value,” “worthless,” “not really worth anything,” and “I did not regard it as having any value,” as used in the foregoing evidence, when given a reasonable construction in the light of the context, are sufficiently broad to include loth intrinsic value and marlcet value. The, defendant also introduced- in evidence, without objection, the following allegations contained in one of plaintiffs amendments to its petition:
It follows from what has been said that the following excerpt from the charge (complained of in the motion for new trial) was not error for any reason assigned: “If you find from the testimony in the case, if it should be your verdict that the stock at the time the contract was made, or the purchase was made, that it had no market or intrinsic value at that time, and if you should believe further it had no market value or intrinsic value at the time of the tender of the stock, if there was a tender in the case, in that event'
Judgment affirmed.
