7 Ga. App. 525 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1910
A corporation in Atlanta, desiring to obtain the exclusive agency for the sale of a certain typewriter, known as the Oliver tj’pewriter, in certain territory, entered into a contract with the Oliver Typewriter Company. Under the contract there was no obligation to extend credit, but it was provided that should the typewriter company extend credit to the other contracting party, the debt should be represented by promissory notes bearing 3 per cent, interest. Subsequently, to induce an extension of credit to the corporation referred to, J. W. Fielder and Ivan E. Allen executed a separate agreement promising that they would jointly and severally guarantee the prompt payment of any and all indebtedness that the corporation then owed the Oliver Typewriter Company, or might subsequently owe it, together with interest at 6 per cent, per annum, and would pay all costs and expenses incurred in collecting the indebtedness to be created. The notes from the corporation to the Oliver Typewriter Company, it will be remembered, bore interest at 3 per cent., and made no provision for attorney’s fees or expense of collecting notes. The notes were not paid at maturity, and it was necessary for the Typewriter Company to employ an attorney, at an expense of $75, to collect them. After they had been thus collected, the Oliver Typewriter Company sued Fielder & Allen for the difference between the 3 per cent, and the 6 per cent., and for the $75 expense incurred in collecting the notes. The justice of the peace in whose court the case was originally brought gave judgment both for the difference in
The case presents a question as to the proper construction of the Civil Code of 1895, §3667, as amended in 1900 (Acts 1900, p. 53, Van Epps’ Code Supplement, §6185). It reads as follows: "Obligations to pay attorney’s fees upon any note or other evidence of indebtedness, in addition to the rate of interest specified therein, are void, and no court shall enforce such agreement to pay attorney’s fees unless the debtor shall fail to pay such debt on or before the return day of the court to which suit is brought for the collection of the same; provided, the holder of the obligation sued upon, his agent or attorney, notifies the defendant, in writing, ten days before suit is brought, of his intention to bring suit, and also the term of the court to which suit will be brought.” The judge of the superior court in this case, in striking the recovery of attorney’s fees, gave as his reason that the notice prescribed in the above-quoted statute had not been given.
This case, as will be seen from the statement of facts, is not an attempt to enforce any agreement contained in the original notes from the principal debtor to the plaintiff, nor is it an attempt to collect from the present defendants (the guarantors) attorney’s fees expended in enforcing the liability against them. Fielder & Allen agreed that if the Oliver Typewriter Company would extend certain credit to the corporation, they would indemnify the creditor against a reasonably-to-be-anticipated expenditure. Since the corporation, in contracting with the Typewriter Company, had agreed to pay interest on the indebtedness, the statute above referred to prevented it from agreeing to pay attorney’s fees additional to that interest, or rather would have rendered an agreement to pay attorney’s fees unenforceable, unless the creditor had given the notice required by the statute, and the other things mentioned therein as conditions precedent to the right to claim attorney’s fees had occurred. However, the corporation made no promise to pay attorney’s fees, and, therefore, in no event were any collectible from it. Ho matter what notice the creditor might have given, he could not have charged the corporation, the principal debtor, with
One who studies the above-quoted statute attentively will notice that the legislature apparently did not intend that all obligations to pay attorney’s fees should be void. They were dealing only with obligations to pay attorney’s fees upon notes and other evidences of indebtedness, in addition to the rate of interest specified therein; that is, they were legislating against a creditor’s collecting out of his principal debtor, or one who joined with him in the original promise, an additional sum as attorney’s fees for collecting the indebtedness created therein. It did not have reference to col
Our statute touching the enforcement of promises to pay attorney's fees, it should be remembered, is in derogation of the common law, and is an abridgment of the ordinary right of contract; it is, therefore, to be strictly construed, and not to be extended to a case not clearly falling within its terms. This case does not fall within the letter of the act. Upon its special, particular features it may fall somewhat within what would be the spirit of the act, if the act were to be liberally construed; but it is not clearly within the spirit of the act, and the act is not to be liberally construed. We therefore conclude that the judge of the superior court erred in striking out from the judgment of the justice of the peace the amount recovered for the sums expended by the plaintiff as attorney’s fees in collecting the notes from the corporation.
Judgment reversed.