128 Ga. 531 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the facts.)
At common law the weight of authority was to the effect that the recital in a deed of conveyance of the payment of the consideration money could not be denied by parol; but even there the judges sometimes expressed doubt on the subject. See Rowntree v. Jacob, 2 Taunton, 141; Lampon v. Corke, 5 Barn. & Alder. 606; Baker v. Dewey, 1 Barn. & Cress, 704. The weight of authority in America is to the contrary, and treats the recital of the payment of the purchase-money like the mention of the date of the deed,, and other matters incidental and collateral to the principal thing, and holds that while the grantor is estopped from denying the conveyance, yet the recital is considered at most but prima facie evidence only of payment, in an action of assumpsit to recover the price which is yet unpaid. At an early date it was held by this court that the recital of the payment of the consideration money in a deed does not fall within the rule ..by which a party is estopped to deny it. Harwell v. Pitts, 20 Ga. 723. In Martin v. Gordon, 24 Ga, 533, it was ruled that upon a suit for damages for a breach of warranty, the amount of consideration money recited in the deed could be inquired into. Two of the Judges held that this could be done not only against the grantee of the warrantor, but against any subsequent grantee. Judge McDonald dissented, urging that a grantor ought not to be allowed to name a consideration in his deed and thus induce subsequent purchasers to rely on it,,
On the admissibility of parol evidence to explain the consideration or identify the debt to be secured by a mortgage, there have been numerous decisions. In Sutton v. Sutton, 25 Ga. 383, it was held that “A discrepancy between the' debt and the mortgage given to secure it may be explained by parol proof.” In Gunn v. Jones, 67 Ga. 398, the same ruling was made, and it was added: “but a draft having no apparent connection with a mortgage will not be admitted without explanation.” The leading case on the
As to a mortgage, the code says it must “specify the debt to secure which it is given.” Civil Code, §2724. It may be doubtful whether, if a sum be thus specified as part of the agreement as the amount to be secured, it can be enlarged by parol. One or two authorities have come to the notice of the writer in which a distinction is drawn between increasing by ¡Darol proof a specific amount agreed to be secured by a mortgage and the admission of parol proof to show what was in fact the consideration of a deed purporting to be an absolute conveyance, though really given as a security. It is not necessary in the present case to determine the rule of evidence in regard to mortgages or instruments stating on their face that they are given to secure only a named amount, or whether the amount so agreed to be secured is a limitation forming a part of a contract which can not be enlarged by parol. Nor is it necessary to go as far as some of the eases above cited. As already stated, the instrument here involved is not on its face a mortgage, but a deed. It does not declare that it is given to secure a specified amount, or any amount at all. Apparently no bond to reconvey upon payment of any specified amount was given. In order to show that it is a security at all, parol evidence is necessary. To do this the consideration of the deed must be inquired into, and it must be shown what the real consideration was. Having gone thus far in the introduction of parol evidence, under the rulings of this court already cited in regard to the admission of such evidence to prove that the real consideration of a deed was more or less than that recited, there was no error in admitting parol evidence to show that the indebtedness secured by the deed when
There was, however, conflicting evidence in the ease. Thus, Jones, the agent of the plaintiff, testified that “no agreement was. made about this deed except what is on its’ face.” Smith, the. bookkeeper of Jones, testified to the effect that there was an agreement and understanding between Jones and Hester. He said, “In addition to that, the understanding was that any further indebtedness made thereafter was also to be secured by the deed.”' Plainly no such agreement as this appears on the face of the deed. There may be some mode of reconciling or explaining these conflicting statements, but they should be passed upon by the jury,, not by the judge.
Judgment reversed.