120 Ga. 358 | Ga. | 1904
There was a demurrer to the answer filed by the defendant, which demurrer was overruled by the court; and the first question to be decided is whether the court erred in this ruling. The suit was apparently one hy a building and loan association against one of its borrowing members and stockholders, for the recovery of the amount due to the association by such member and stockholder upon an advance made by it to her upon her stock, and for the establishment, in the judgment, of a special lien upon described land which had been conveyed by the debtor to the creditor as security for the debt. The answer of the defendant set up the defense of usury, under which she sought both to reduce the amount of the plaintiff’s claim and to invalidate the security deed. The demurrer was: “ that said answer is not sufficient in law; for that it attempts to set up the plea of usury and contains no allegation of fact which, if proved, would take the contract sued on out of that class of contracts of building associations recognized by the law as not being usurious.” Taking the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition to be true, the case would fall within the well-settled rule in this State, that the ordinary contract between a legitimate building, and loan association and one of its borrowing members and stockholders is not usurious, although the borrower may therein obligate himself to pay more for the use of the money advanced upon his stock than interest thereon at the highest rate which the law authorizes in other contracts. But these allegations, except as to the giving of the bond sued on and the execution and delivery of the security deed, were expressly denied by the defendant. " All that she admitted was “ that said bond and written instrument sued on were given by her as alleged in the petition,” and she immediately explained and limited this admission, by alleging that “ they were given as security of said loan of $1,800.00 and six per cent, interest,” and that, “under the contract between her and plaintiff, she .was a mere borrower and not in any wise a stockholder in said plaintiff company; ” that the plaintiff “approached her, before said loan was made, with the dis
If the understanding between the parties, prior to and at the time that the contract was entered into, was that the defendant was not.to become a stockholder in a building and loan association, but the relation of the parties was to be merely that of lender and borrower, and in this transaction the plaintiff adopted the mere forms of a building and loan association’s “ method of doing business, not bona fide as a .legitimate building and loan association, but merely as a device to evade the laws of Georgia in regard to usury,” certainly these facts would take the contract between the
While Wharton lays down the rule that “A party who commits the management of his whole business, or a particular line of business, to an agent, is bound by the admissions of the agent, as to his entire business committed to him;” and that, “When the agent is a general agent representing his principal continuously,” it is not “necessary for the admission of such declarations that they should either have been part of the res gestee, or should have been authorized” (Whart. Ev. § 1177), the courts are by no means harmonious in holding such to be the rule. There is, however, no
Judgment reversed.