31 S.E.2d 89 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1944
1. The court appears to have assumed a state of facts not sustained by the evidence, and the charges to the jury, based upon such facts, were erroneous and harmful to the plaintiff, and good cause for a new trial.
2. Under the evidence, and as a matter of law, a finding was demanded that the transaction wherein the transfer of the principal sum sued for took place was a loan of the sum with a stipulated rate of interest payable thereupon.
3. The defendant's contention that the plaintiff failed to prove her case because of the impeachment of the principal witness is not sustained by the evidence, and is therefore without merit.
1. The second special ground of the motion complains of a charge of the court as follows: "Should you find, however, that Guerardie and Huhn, under all the circumstances and facts of the case as you find them to exist, understood the placing of the $4500 with Huhn was not to be a loan, but was the consideration for Huhn to pay $270 per year to Guerardie during his life, and then to Miss Mitchell during her life, and the understanding was that nothing else was to be done by Huhn, and the $4500 was not to be repaid, then the plaintiff would not be entitled to a recovery of the said $4500." The third special ground complains of this charge: "Should you find the transaction was not a loan, but was an arrangement or agreement whereby Guerardie placed $4500 with Huhn as the consideration for a promise by Huhn to pay $270 annually to Guerardie during his life and to Miss Mitchell during her life, then you would find for the defendant in this case." The trial court submitted to the jury in the charges complained of the question whether the transaction was the purchase of an annuity instead of a loan. The main complaint of the plaintiff in error is that these charges were not authorized by the evidence. "The general rule is that a charge to the jury which is not authorized by evidence, and which is calculated to mislead and confuse the jury, requires a new trial." Richter v.Atlantic Company,
2. Since this case has been tried twice and will be tried again we think it pertinent to say that under the evidence in the record the transaction between Guerardie and Huhn was as a matter of law a loan of $4500 by the former to the latter with interest at six per cent. per annum, and a verdict for the plaintiff in the full amount of the principal together with appropriate interest was demanded. When the case was here before, the majority of the court did not deem it necessary to decide more than that the transaction was not a gift, and that the receipt given by Miss Mitchell to Huhn after Guerardie's death did not amount to an accord and satisfaction. The controlling issue before this court at that time was the direction of the verdict in the face of evidence that would have warranted a finding that the transaction was a loan. But now we have a verdict found by the jury after hearing evidence and being charged by the court. It is therefore necessary that we decide whether under the evidence and the principles of law applicable the jury were authorized to find that the transaction was anything other than a loan. In order to find that it was an annuity it is necessary to resort to speculation and conjecture, *428
and to assume and supply features and facts lacking in the evidence. On the other hand, we have present in the evidence several earmarks of a loan. The principal witness testified that after the death of Guerardie, Huhn said to him, "I have got forty-five hundred dollars in cash of Virgil Guerardie's money;" that Huhn told him that Guerardie had said, "I want to leave this money with you because I trust you more than I would any bank," and, "go ahead and take it and pay me six per cent. per year during my life, and at my death pay Miss Mitchell the same amount, six percent. on the money, until she dies;" and that he (Huhn) had not paid the principal debt nor had he finished paying the interest on the money. Here we have four elements of a loan, namely: a principal sum, a placing of the sum with a safe borrower, an agreement that interest was to be paid, and a recognition by the receiver of the money of his liability for the return of the principal amount with accrued interest. Huhn's concern over his income-tax return can be construed in the light of a loan because interest paid on a loan would have been a deductible item. He did not seem to know whether this type of loan should be reflected in his returns. As far as appears from the evidence, there was no return of the $4500 as income by Huhn. If the transaction were anything other than a borrowing of the money at interest by Huhn, he would have had an item of income. It is to us significant that much was said about the payment of interest in all of the conversations, dealings, and transactions related by the witness Urquhart, and that the annual payment of $270 was the equivalent of six per cent. interest per annum on $4500, the principal sum involved. "The usual import of the term [interest] is the amount which one has contracted to pay for the use of borrowed money." Department of Revenue v. King Bros.Motor Co.,
3. Counsel for the defendant in error insist that the principal witness, Urquhart, swore wilfully and knowingly falsely, and that for this reason his testimony should be entirely disregarded in view of the court's charge of the provisions of the Code, § 38-1806, namely: "When a witness shall be successfully contradicted as to a material matter, his credit as to other matters shall be for the jury, but if a witness shall swear wilfully and knowingly falsely, his testimony shall be disregarded entirely, unless corroborated by circumstances or other unimpeached evidence. The credit to be given his testimony where impeached for general bad character or for contradictory statements out of court shall be for the jury to determine." While Urquhart's testimony was confused and somewhat contradictory, it appears that he had been sick "off and on for the last five years," and had been confined for about nine months, and he testified that this sickness had affected his mind "as to details and dates and things of that sort." However, he emphasized that he was perfectly clear as to what Huhn told him about the circumstances under which he (Huhn) received the money from Guerardie. It has been held that "before this principle of such total rejection . . will have application, it must manifestly appear, not only that the witness on one or the other occasion has sworn falsely to a material matter, but that he has done so wilfully and knowingly. The rule does not extend to situations where it is shown to be reasonably possible that the discrepancy was occasioned by `mistake or the failure of memory.'" Smaha v. George,
Judgment reversed. sutton, P. J., and Felton, J., concur. *430