11 Ga. App. 110 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The plaintiff recovered upon a note originally executed and delivered by the defendant to the Louisville Manufacturing Company. The defendant’s plea was stricken, on oral motion, and a verdict in favor of the plaintiff was directed by the court. The only real question in the case turns on whether the court ruled correctly in striking the fifth paragraph of the defendant’s answer.
The plaintiff’s petition alleged that the defendant (Netherland) was indebted to it because his note, payable to the Louisville Manufacturing Company, had been transferred to the plaintiff beíóre maturity. The defendant, in his plea, admitted the execution of the note and refusal to pay it, but pleaded that his liability upon the note had been extinguished by payment to the original payee, and averred that the transferee took the note with full and .actual notice of all defenses which he had against it. The fifth paragraph of the plea averred as .follows: “For further plea in this behalf, defendant says that he was engaged and employed by the Louisville Manufacturing Company during the season 1910 and 1911, to buy cottonseed for the former at the price of $100 per month; that he worked six months in said capacity; that he was indebted to said Louisville Manufacturing Company for fertilizers, and in the spring of the year of 1911 defendant and said Louisville Manufacturing Company had a settlement, defendant paying the difference between his debt against Louisville Manufacturing Company and the debt owing [by?] him, which was accepted by said Louisville Manufacturing Company. Said transaction occurred in the building of plaintiff’s, and its officers had actual knowledge thereof.” At the trial term the plaintiff’s counsel made an oral motion to strike this paragraph, and the court sustained the motion ; and, in conformity with this ruling, the court' refused to allow evidence in support of the allegations of the stricken paragraph, and directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount sued for.
We think the court erred in holding that the fifth paragraph of the plea set up no defense as against the plaintiff, and in excluding the testimony in support of the allegation that the officers of the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the settlement 'by which, as