58 Ga. App. 787 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
Mrs. Grace L. Wayne, as administratrix of the estate of M. L. Light, brought an action against H. T. Oliver and F. B. Oliver, to recover principal, interest, and attorney’s fees on three promissory notes signed by the defendants and payable to M. L. Light. These notes' were for the principal sums of $1000, $400, and $821, respectively. The note for $400 appears to have been paid off after suit was filed, and was not offered in evidence. The other two notes were introduced in evidence, but the note for $821 contained no provision for the collection of attorney’s fees, and the claim for attorney’s fees on it was abandoned. Each of the notes declared on was secured by a deed to realty, and the petition prayed that a receiver be appointed to taire charge of the properties described in those deeds and collect the rents therefrom, and that the defendants be enjoined from "collecting the rents on said properties, and from exercising any acts of ownership' thereto;’’ but, by an agreement between the' parties, the receivership and all equitable features were eliminated, and the action,proceeded at law for a judgment on the notes and a special lien on the property securing them. In their answer the defendants admitted the execution of "certain notes to M. L. Light,” and that they gave him "deeds to secure the payment of said notes,’’ but neither admitted nor denied that "true copies of said papers are set forth,” and did not admit that "the credits shown thereon constitute all that has been paid on said indebtedness.” They denied that "sufficient notice for attorney’s fees has been served upon either of them to make them liable for attorney’s fees;’’ and further pleaded in paragraph 10 of their answer that "at the time of the filing of this suit there was pending in the Supreme Court . . an action for the same claim and cause of action and between the same parties; that said case is undisposed of, and the outcome of the former suit, if the contentions of plaintiff are correct and the judgment of the court is sustained, will authorize a recovery against them for the debt sued on in this case. The former proceeding was and is proceeding properly in so far as jurisdiction is concerned, and all rights of the plaintiff can be and will be determined by the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of F. B. Oliver vs. Grace L. Wayne, admx., M. L. Light, deceased.” At the conclusion of the evidence the court directed a verdict fqr the plaintiff, and a verdict and judgment were rendered accordingly. The defendants filed a motion for a new trial, and their exception is to the overruling of the motion.
Ground 3 avers that the court erred in admitting in evidence “a notice of attorney’s fees and the return receipt signed by E. B. Oliver,” over the objection that “there was no proof of execution and no proof of service;” We hold that there is no merit in the ground. Our subsequent discussion of the assignment of error relating to the direction of the verdict for the plaintiff will shed some light on the foregoing conclusion.
It is urged in ground 4 that the court erred in excluding evidence that five houses located on the property described in the deeds given
We come next to the first special ground, which assigns error upon the judgment directing the verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, it being stated in this ground that certain
Judgment affirmed.