173 Ga. 786 | Ga. | 1931
L. O. Miller filed his petition against the Information Buying Company, alleging this case: On February 27, 1930, said company filed in the municipal court of Atlanta what purports to be a confession of judgment, as follows:
“I agree to a judgment against me in favor of Information Buying Co., in the above named and stated matter for the sum of $400.15, same to be paid at the rate of $50.00 per month, $15.00 on the 1st and $25.00 on the 15th of each month, beginning December 15, 1929, and continuing on the 1st and 15th of each month thereafter until the whole amount shall have been paid in full. Said judgment is for the damage to and conversion of the above amounts as follows: Atlanta Finance Company, $89.00; C. C. Arnold & Company, $23.00; Barnes Investment Company, $23.00; Durham Company, $23.00; Dodson Company, $33.00; Henry & Company, $47.00; T. N. Paris Company, $35.00; Union Investment Company, $68.75; Wall & Company, $32.50; Information Buying Company (fee), $25.00. I, by this writing, waive process, copy of process, copy of petition, also time and term, and all other and further service and notice is waived as to this suit', and judgment is confessed for the amount hereinabove stated.
“This February 27th, 1930.
“L. O. Miller, Defendant. B. B. Jackson, Atty. for plaintiff.”
“And it is so ordered. Clarence Bell, Judge M. C. A.”
This instrument ivas executed in December, 1929, in the office of the defendant’s attorney. At that time there was no suit on file by the defendant against petitioner. The amounts specified in said instrument represent loans made by the parties therein named to petitioner; in which loans the various parties named contracted for and received more than eight per cent, interest, and were not qualified under the small-loan act of August 17, 1920. At no time did petitioner sell to any of the parties named in said instrument any salary which was completely earned; but the notes for said amounts were for partial salaries earned. Sometime in December, 1929, the attorney for the defendant told petitioner to sign what he stated to be a judgment for money loaned to petitioner by said parties with the amounts set out in said instrument. He did not inform petitioner and petitioner did not agree that he ever, converted any moneys or salaries that belonged to any of said parties. The attorney for defendant charged petitioner $25 as attorney’s
The defendant demurred on the grounds that the petition does not set forth a cause of action clearly, fully, and distinctly, that there is no equity therein, and that plaintiff is seeking equity without proposing to do equity. There were various grounds of special demurrer. The judge overruled the demurrer, and the defendant excepted.
The practice of confessing judgment by a defendant after an action is brought was established by immemorial usage, and existed at the common law. Hicks v. Ayer, 5 Ga. 298. So far as our investigation discloses, this practice came into the jurisprudence of this State by the act of February 25, 1784, which adopted the common law of England of force and binding on the inhabitants of the Province of Georgia on May 14, 1776, so far as it was not contrary to the constitution, laws, and form of government established in this State at the date of the passage of said act. Prince’s Digest (1821), 310; Prince’s Digest (1837), 570; Cobb’s Digest, 721. This practice of confessing judgment by a defendant has
So, to determine what is the method of procedure in this matter, we must look to the common law of England. At common law a judgment by confession was one entered for the plaintiff in a case
This brings us to construe section 5954 of the Civil Code, supra, which in part declares that “No confession of judgment shall be entered up . . , unless the cause has been regularly sued out and docketed as in other cases.” Under this section, can a judgment be entered upon a confession of judgment, made before any action is commenced ? Can a debtor confess judgment before suit has been brought? It may be said that this section only prohibits the entry of a confession of judgment until suit has been filed; ' and that as suit was filed on February 27, 1930, and the entry of the confession was made on that day, the terms of this section
Besides, a judgment must be regularly entered upon a confession of judgment. The confession itself is not the judgment of the court. Williams v. Albritton, 52 Ga. 585. The alleged confession amounts to no more than an admission of indebtedness, and an agreement to take' judgment thereon when it can properly be rendered. The confession of judgment, made before any action was begun, was not, as we have seen, such a one that a judgment could be entered thereon after suit was filed, and an entry of such alleged confession after suit was filed would not authorize the rendition of judgment thereon. Such entry of the judgment on confession was null and void; and no valid judgment could be entered thereon. Besides, no judgment was entered upon the confession of judgment; and the endorsement thereon by the judge, to wit, “and it is so ordered,” did not amount to a judgment on the confession; but at most it amounted to an order making the confession a part of the record in the case. This construction is borne out by the provision of the act of 1792- which prohibited an entry of a confession of judgment unless it was “made under
In Grady v. Information Buying Co., 168 Ga. 175 (147 S. E. 558), the petition was filed and process issued before the alleged confession of judgment was made. The process was dated April 22, 1926, and on April 22, 1926, the judge of the municipal court of Macon made the same endorsement on the confession of judgment as was made in the case which we have under consideration. That is, he made on the confession of judgment this order: “And it is so ordered.” In that case the confession of judgment was on the petition. The ruling in the case cited should not be extended beyond the facts thereof. So we are of the opinion that a confession of judgment which' would authorize an entry of judgment thereon, under the law of this State on this subject, which was' adopted from the common law of England, can not be made until an action is instituted. Such confession of judgment must be made in a suit and after its institution. So if we treat the entry by the judge on the alleged confession of judgment in this case as constituting a judgment, the same is void for lack of such confession of judgment as would authorize the entry of judgment.
The defendant demurred to the petition upon the ground, among others, that the plaintiff is seeking equity without proposing to do equity. This contention is based upon the familiar equity maxim that “He who would have equity must do equity, and give effect to all equitable rights of the other parties respecting the subject-matter of the suit.” Civil Code (1910), § 4521. It is not pointed out what equity or equitable rights of the defendant the plaintiff is neglecting or failing to give effect to. The defendant claims to have a judgment at law against the plaintiff, which
Applying the principles above announced, the trial' judge did not err in overruling the demurrer to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.