32 Ga. App. 522 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
The Citizens Bank of Wrens, Ga., a corporation, filed suit in the superior court of Warren county against F. A. Hobbs upon five promissory notes. The petition contained five counts, one for each note. To neither count was there attached any copy of the note sued. The first count was as follows:
“1. That the said F. A. Hobbs is a resident of Warren county, Georgia.
“2. That the said F. A. Hobbs did upon the 11th day of November, 1920, execute and deliver to your petitioner his promissory note for the principal sum of $553.00, the same being due upon demand, with interest at the rate of 8% per annum.
“3. That your petitioner has demanded of the said F. A. Hobbs the payment of the above-described promissory note, and payment has been refused.
“4. That the above-described note contained a provision that if said note was collected by suit or placed in hands of an attorney for collection, the defendant would pay 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, together with said principal and interest; that on the 30th day of August, 1923, petitioner did deposit in the Hnited States mail, with sufficient postage thereon, and did register the same, addressed to the said F. A. Hobbs, a notice in writing that it was the intention of the petitioner to bring suit on said note to the October term, 1923, of Warren superior court, and that unless the defendant paid said note on or before the return day of said court, which was on the 11th day of September, 1923, that in such event petitioner would claim the attorney’s fees as expressed in said note, and that
“Wherefore petitioner prays judgment against the defendant upon said promissory note for the principal sum, interest, and attorney’s fees due thereon.”
Each of the other counts was in. the same form, except as to the amount and date of the notes, and except also in the fact that in each of the remaining counts it was alleged that the note bore interest at 8 per cent, per annum from date, while in the first count, as will have been noticed, it was not alleged from what date the note was to bear interest.
The case was marked in default at the appearance term, but the defendant, before verdict, filed a written motion that the court should “refuse rendering any judgment against defendant,” or, if the case should be submitted to a jury, that the court should “charge and instruct the jury that they would not be authorized to render .a verdict in said case against this movant,” the grounds of which were as follows: “1. Because there is not sufficient allegation made and alleged in plaintiff’s petition to authorize a verdict for any amount against defendant. 2. Because, under all the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, there is no legal cause of action set out, nor any legal reason for passing or giving a judgment or verdict against defendant. 3. Because no allegation of the required statutory written notice being given so as to make the attorney’s fees recoverable. 4. Nowhere is it alleged that defendant is indebted to plaintiff in any amount upon said notes. No allegation that said notes were non-negotiable.” The court passed an order dismissing this motion, and thereupon directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for principal, interest, and attorney’s fees. To each of these judgments the defendant excepted.
Under the authorities cited in the headnotes, we are of the opinion that the petition set forth a cause of action in each count. The headnotes are framed with reference to the first count, but the rulings made therein are controlling alike upon every other count.
It will be observed that the motion attacked the petition as a whole, and the assignments are 'upon the verdict and judgment as a whole. It is true that in paragraph 3 of the defendant’s motion it is insisted that there is “no allegation of the required statutory
What we have just said applies equally to a contention made in the supplementary brief of the plaintiff in error, that the verdict and judgment for interest and attorney’s fees were excessive, under a proper calculation, even assuming that attorney’s fees were recoverable.
It follows that the judgment of the trial court in dismissing the defendant’s motion must be affirmed; but the judgment of affirmance is not to be so construed as to preclude the plaintiff in error from instituting appropriate proceedings for the purpose of having the judgment amended by striking therefrom so much. as awards attorney’s fees, or any excess in the attorney’s fees or the interest, if upon the hearing of the application to amend it should appear by the record that the judgment was in part illegal.
Judgment affirmed.