Potts gave his note to the Moultrie Banking Company, and, as a part of the collateral to secure its payment, turned over to the banking company a rent note given him by Phelps, a tenant of his. In the fall of the year in which both notes were due, Phelps, under the instructions of Potts, delivered to the Moultrie Banking Company receipts for 13 hales of cotton stored in the Farmers and Merchants Warehouse at Moultrie, Georgia, the receipts to be held'by the bank “as collateral security for both of the notes.” The cotton was destroyed by fire, and Potts sued the Moultrie Banking Company, setting out these facts and further alleging, in his petition as amended, that “the warehouse receipts 'herein specified were by the said M. T. Phelps delivered to Z. H. Clark, the then cashier of the defendant’s hank, and in charge of its office and business, and at the time of 'this delivery the said Clark instructed the said M. T.' Phelps not to have said cotton insured, or insurance written covering said property; he, the said Clark, then and there stating and promising-the said M. T. Phelps that he, the said Clark, as agent of the defendant bank, would procure fire insurance to be written insuring said cotton against loss
TJpon the trial the plaintiff offered to prove by Phelps- that at the time the receipts were delivered to Clark, the cashier of the bank, Clark told Phelps not to have the cotton insured, “that the Moultrie Banking Company carried insurance in its own name on all cotton deposited with them by its customers, and that the bank would have this particular cotton insured for its full market value.” The plaintiff offered also to introduce testimony of the same witness as follows: “I was not the agent for plaintiff, Potts, or for the bank; my agency for Potts was limited to delivering the warehouse- receipts to the bank. I have no interest in the' result of this
Judgment affirmed.