10 Ga. App. 548 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Mrs. N. J. Eight foreclosed a chattel mortgage executed by Louis Robinson, and to the foreclosure the mortgagor interposed an affidavit of illegality. The mortgage and the note which it was given to secure were included in the same writing. By its terms Robinson promised to pay N. J. Eight, or order, on October 1, 1908, $500, with interest at maturity at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum; and, to secure the payment of the note, he mortgaged a growing crop of 75 acres in cotton and 38 acres in corn on a designated farm, and several head of live stock. The condition of the note was that if he should “ truly pay the above note at maturity, then this mortgage to be null and void.” There is no intimation, from the language of the note of mortgage, that it was executed to secure future advances.' The consideration of the note is not stated further than by the usual phrase “value received.” The affidavit of illegality set up that the mortgagor had paid the
There is no conflict as to the fact that the defendant sustained, by uncontradicted testimonjr, the ground of illegality based upon the provisions of § 1882 of the Civil Code (1910), and established by the plaintiff’s own witnesses, that he was entitled to have a deduction of one fourth of $330.89 of supplies sold to him by the plaintiff. It was also admitted that the defendant had paid, upon the supplies advanced him from the store, $368.08. Under this view of the evidence the defendant would have owed for supplies from the store only $361.70, instead of $444.42, and therefore would also have sustained the ground of illegality in which ho asserted that he owed nothing upon the mortgage. Under this view of the case it seems to us that the defendant could well have complained of the judgment for $65.66 rendered against him, but he has not done so. So much as to the evidence which was admitted by the court; and upon this branch of the case it appears that the only ground for complaint by the plaintiff consists in the fact that if she was entitled to recover at all she was entitled to a finding for a larger amount. This contention rests upon two propositions: (1) that under the evidence which was excluded and not considered by the court, the levy of the mortgage fi. fa. was entitled to proceed for the full amount of the fi. fa., and (2) that even if the first proposition be not sound, the judge should have entered judgment for $76.34, instead of $65.66, upon the evidence which the judge did consider. We shall therefore first consider the assignments of error which complain of the exclusion of testimony.