109 Ga. 12 | Ga. | 1899
Morris, as administrator of Ragland, instituted an action against Cassin, Purtell, and the Georgia Loan, Sav
The oral testimony was, briefly stated, as follows: Mr. Felder, one of the counsel for the plaintiff in error, testified, that he knew Ragland, who was stenographer for the witness’s firm. Ragland died about December, 1896. He received from $25 to $30 per month for his services as a stenographer; he was very poor, and witness never saw any signs of his having any large amount of money at any time; he had no visible property up to the date of his death. There was no evidence of his having any more money than what he received from his salary. Witness’s .firm had an office in. the building known as “Temple Court”; the defendant banking company, Cassin, and Purtell were just across the sti’eet. Purtell had an office which was either connected with some company that Cassin was following, or in the back room of the bank building. Cassin had an office designated by the sign “Cashier,” the bank business being immediately in rear of it. “I went over to see Cassin to ¡talk with him about this matter of insurance; I knew' him
Herrington, testified, tRat he was security on the bond of Morris as administrator; he went to the bank at different times with and also without Morris; whenever he went there Cassin
This evidence being submitted, defendants moved for a non-suit. The plaintiff then offered to amend his petition by averring that the note of $4,300 was given by Ragland for an advance of $106, and that $4,194 of the sum was usury, and that the bank is affected with notice thereof. The amendment was objected to, disallowed by the court, and a judgment was then rendered granting a nonsuit in the case, to which the plaintiff excepted. An exception is also taken to the refusal of the court to require the defendant banking company to prqduce its books under a subpcena duces tecum.
Assuming, for the sake of the argument, that the note at its execution was without consideration, invalid, and part of a scheme to defraud, it becomes important to ascertain what business relation Cassin, one of the payees, bore to the banking company, and in what manner the note was negotiated. One of the witnesses testified that he had known the banking company for eight or nine years; that Cassin was apparently in charge of affairs; that witness knew of no one else having active control of affairs besides Cassin ; that witness had a great many business dealings with the bank; that Cassin acted for the bank whenever such dealings were had, and he does not recall any transaction ever had with the bank where Cassin did not act. The president of the bank testified that he knew nothing about any of the notes or any of the parties to any of
We are not prepared to admi,t that, where the agent has notice, the doctrine of implied notice to the principal rests alono on the presumption that the agent will disclose his knowledge to his principal. Many adj udicated cases place it there; others do not; and we shall take occasion presently to cite some of the latter, and present some of the reasons why the Arnoux case, supra, falls short of settling the rule applicable to the case at bar. We may say here, that we find it impracticable to review in detail the many interesting and pertinent cases cited by counsel for defendants. Necessarily, in stating the reasons which impel our conclusions, we, to some extent at least, discuss the principles which they enunciate. Taking the rule of constructive notice as stated in our code to be fully established, and considering in connection therewith, the exceptions to this general rule urged by counsel, we call attention to the view of Judge Story as expressed in his work on Agency, § 140. He says: “ Notice of facts to an agent is constructive notice thereof to the principal himself, where it arises from, or is at the time connected with, the subject-matter of his agency; for, upon general principles of public policy, it is presumed that the agent has communicated such facts to the principal; and if he has not, still, the principal having entrusted the agent with the particular business, the other party has a right to deem his acts and knowledge obligatory upon the principal; otherwise, the neglect of the agent, whether designed or undesigned, might operate most injuriously to the rights and interests of such party.” In discussing the duty of the agent to communicate the knowledge which he has to the principal, Mr. Wade,
We admit the existence of many adjudicated cases which seemingly support the contention of the defendants as to the exception to the general rule under which they claim that the banking company is entitled to hold the note of Ragland, freed from any implied notice of Cassin’s fraud, if such there be. But a distinction must be drawn in these cases between the exception and the rule. We concede it to be a sound proposition that where an officer or agent of the corporation, as a party in interest for-himself, deals with the corporation, the latter is not charged with notice of the information possessed by such officer or agent so dealing, but it is because in such a transaction the assumed agent is in realty the adverse party and is not to be treated in so dealing as an agent of the corporation at all. And many, if not a majority, of the cases which announce the doctrine that when the agent has an interest in the transaction which would be prejudiced by the disclosure of the information, the presumption of its communication does not prevail, will be found to be where the agent or officer acts in his individual capacity and treats with some other officer or agent of the corporation. In these cases the two parties to the contract are the corporation and the individual who happens to be an officer of the corporation but acting in the prosecution in his individual capacity. But the principle involved in those cases can not be fully applicable to a case where one party,
Reversed.