112 Ga. 426 | Ga. | 1900
The defendant in error filed a petition, under which, a rule nisi issued, to foreclose a mortgage given by the plaintiff in error to secure a promissory note executed by her. It appears-from the petition that the note and mortgage were executed on the 24th day of February, 1897; that one L. Frieden was the payee of the note and the grantee in the deed of mortgage, and that on the 4th day of March, 1897, Frieden sold and delivered the note to-the defendant in error, and, on the same day, transferred, sold, and assigned the mortgage to the same party; and that the note was-for the principal sum of six hundred dollars to become due on August 1,1897. The rule having been issued and served, Mrs. Jones-answered and averred, among other things, that she did give the
It must be conceded that the rights of the defendant in error in this case are to be determined from his status as a bona fide holder for value. There was direct proof of this fact, which was in no way contradicted. But, in the absence of proof, the provision of our law found in the Civil Code, § 3696, makes him such, the presumption being, where the holder is one other than the. original
Section 324 of the Penal Code prescribes: “If any person, informing or prosecuting under pretense of any penal law, shall compound with the offender, or direct the suit or information to be discontinued, unless it be by leave of the court where the same is pending, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” This section was, referred to by Chief Justice Simmons in the case of Harris v. Webb & Rutledge, 101 Ga. 84; and it was' there ruled that it was an illegal act for the creditor and husband to arrange that the former should have certain property of the wife for the purpose of settling the debt of her husband and thereby suppressing a criminal prosecution against him. Section 956 of the Penal Code provides-that all cases of indictments or special presentments shall be submitted to a jury, unless there is a settlement between the prosecutor and the defendant, which settlement shall be good and valid only by the approval and order of the court. This is very general, and its meaning not very plain. Under the literal reading of this section, its provisions are not restricted to misdemeanors, but would seem to apply as well to all classes of felonies. We take it, however, that it refers to such cases as are authorized by law to be-settled between the prosecutor and the defendant, but by its terms-such settlement is confined to cases in which indictments or special presentments have been returned. By the provisions of section 3894, an injured person may consent to the satisfaction and settlement of a tort, hut where the tort amounts to a crime the injured person may only receive compensation for the personal injury; and it is expressly provided that any attempt to satisfy the public offense or to suppress a prosecution therefor is illegal and vitiates the
So that we think that if we confine the averments made in the plea to their narrowest limits, and assume, because it was not otherwise pleaded, that the criminal offense for the settlement of which it is averred that the note and mortgage were given was a misdemeanor, then the consideration was an illegal one. Was it an immoral one in the sense of the statute ? One of the definitions •of “immoral ” given in the Standard Dictionary is “hostile to the welfare of the general public.” And Mr. Bouvier defines immorality to be “ that which is contra bonos mores; ” and in defining what contracts are contra bonos mores, the same author says, among ■other things which he names, that those which have a tendency to
Judgment reversed.