129 Ga. 35 | Ga. | 1907
1. Where the main purpose .of the suit is to foreclose a mortgage, and there is also an incidental prayer for relief appropriate to insolvency proceedings, a receiver’s possession thereunder, as to the property included in the mortgage, will not be affected by a subsequent adjudication in bankruptcy. Merry v. Jones, 119 Ga. 643, 46 S. E. 861.
2. Even if the instrument sought to be foreclosed in equity is, on its face, not a mortgage, but a bill of sale to secure a debt, it is within the power
3. The amendment offered by the defendant in error to his original petition for the foreclosure of the alleged mortgage, while inartificial in form and somewhat indefinite in its allegations, and upon this ground subject to special demurrer, was, in the absence of such demurrer, sufficient to authorize the admission of evidence tending to show that both parties to the instrument intended that it should contain words making it a mortgage covering the stock of goods as "a stock in bulk changing in specifies, and including the soda-fount m the store.”
■ 3. (a) The instrument reformed takes effect from the time when it was originally executed,' except as to bona, fide purchasers without notice and those standing in like relations.
4. After the amendment seeking to have the instrument reformed, it was competent to show by parol evidence what the intention of the parties thereto was; as upon the ascertainment of their mutual intention depends the determination of the right of the plaintiff in the equitable petition to the reformation of the paper as prayed. Such parol testimony was not admissible to vary or explain the terms of the instrument as it was originally executed, but was admissible .for the consideration of the jury in passing upon the question as to whether certain other terms should be added to it, because they were originally intended as a part of the paper, but had been omitted from it by mutual mistake of the parties.
5. Where the name of a corporation as mortgagor, together with its common seal, is affixed to a mortgage by one signing his name as treasurer of such corporation, the presumption is that such officer had authority to execute the instrument in behalf of the corporation. Carr v. Georgia Loan & Trust Co., 108 Ga. 757, 33 S. E. 190.
6. The presumption in favor of the authority of the officers executing the . paper referred to was rebuttable; but there being no evidence impeaching the presumptive authority in this case, the admission of the other evidence tending to éstablish the authority, if error, was harmless.
7. It was error for the court to submit to the jury the decision of the question “as to whether this instrument sued on is a deed or bill of sale, or whether or not it is a mortgage.” The construction of the paper, - inasmuch as it was unambiguous, was a question for the court. Besides, while the paper itself is free from ambiguity, this part of the charge is not, as it might be understood by the jury as referring to the paper as it stood before or after being reformed.
8. The court having properly instructed the jury that the power of a court of equity to grant relief in cases of the kind under ■ consideration is exercised with caution, and that to justify its exercise the evidence must be clear, unequivocal, and decisive as to the mistake, the fact that the court in a subsequent part of the charge instructed the jury that
10. It appearing that the plaintiff in the foreclosure proceedings was president of the corporation, and there being no controversy under the pleadings and evidence as to this fact, the court should not have so charged the jury as to leave upon their minds the impression that it was an open question for their decision whether or not he was actually an officer of the corporation.
11. The intention and purpose of the parties to the instrument under consideration, in the making of the same, being a material question for determination, it was error for the court to refuse an appropriate request to charge embracing the following: “You may take into consideration the kinship, friendship, or intimacy of the parties concerned, see what their interests were; you may look to the whole dealings with the corporate affairs of Perry’s Pharmacy; and from all the circumstances • that have been brought out in evidence you are to judge of this question.”
12. Other questions made in the record are not dealt with, as it is not probable that they will arise on the next trial.
Judgment reversed.