15 Ga. App. 822 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
The American Trust & Banking Company brought suit against B. S. Pryor on a promissory note, dated July 18, 1912, and due January 10, 1913, for the principal sum of $750, which was signed by him and by its terms made payable to “ myself,” and indorsed by him and by Smith & Connor. The defendant filed a plea denying the allegation of indebtedness in the declaration of the plaintiff, and setting up as an affirmative defense against the collection of the note various allegations of misrepresentation and fraud made to the defendant by Smith & Connor at the time the note was procured, and in order to induce the defendant to execute it—the representations being in reference to the value of stock in a certain corporation, for the purchase of which the note was executed and delivered to Smith & Connor, the agents of this corporation. The plea further set up that the defendant had “notified the plaintiff of the circumstances under which such note was given,” but did not say when this notice was given to the plaintiff, nor by whom the notice was received on the part of the plaintiff, and failed to show that the notice was given to the plaintiff before the purchase of the note. A demurrer to the plea as filed was interposed by the plaintiff, and when the demurrer came up at the proper time for argument, the presiding judge declined to pass upon it, on account of his possible disqualification, and the case went over, by express agreement, to the first day of a subsequent adjourned term of the court. Through some misunderstanding, the merits of which it is unnecessary to discuss under the view we take of the case, counsel for the defendant failed to be present on the first day of the adjourned term of the court when the case came up in its order, in accordance with the previous setting thereof for trial before a judge qualified to dispose of the ease. The plaintiff insisted upon its demurrer, and after argument the court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the plea, and a judgment in behalf of the plaintiff for the amount of the note resulted. Later during the same day, coun
The petition asking that the judgment be set aside was not verified, but was signed simply by the attorney for‘the movant. A rule nisi thereupon was issued by the presiding judge, requiring the plaintiff to show cause at a future date why the verdict and judgment should not be vacated. The hearing was had on the date fixed, and it appears from the bill of exceptions that the attorney for the movant then introduced an affidavit made by himself, setting out in detail and with careful particularity facts leading to his failure to be present at the time and place of trial when the judgment was rendered. The bill of exceptions recites that the movant introduced as evidence the original petition of the plaintiff, on which the verdict and judgment complained of were based, the original plea filed by the defendant, which is a part of the record in the said case; and an amendment which he, the movant, “proposed to offer" which was sworn to by E. S. Pryor, and was as follows: “First. That the plaintiff is not a bona fide purchaser for value of the note sued upon, without notice of the method used by Smith &
The plaintiff insisted that as the note sued upon was signed by Pryor and made payable to his own order, it was not a negotiable instrument which would be free from attack in the hands of one who purchased it before due, for value and without notice of any defects therein other than the notice brought home to the purchaser by the fact that the note was payable to the order of the maker. The note, as we have already said, was indorsed by the maker, E. S. Pryor, to whose order it was made payable, and was further indorsed by Smith & Connor, from whom it was obtained by the plaintiff.
The Civil Code, § 4270, defines a promissory note to be “a written promise made by one or more to pay to another, or order, or bearer, at a specified time, a specific amount of money, or other articles of value.” The code section does not declare that a promissory note is a written promise made by one or more “to pay to the order of another, or bearer,” but explicitly says that such a note is a promise to pay to “another, or order, or bearer,” using the disjunctive conjunction between “another” and “or order,” and between “or order” and “or bearer,” which we may interpret to mean “to another, or to order or to bearer.” A note payable to maker “or order” would come exactly within the terms of this description, and, when indorsed by the maker, would become a negotiable instrument.
In Moody v. Threlkeld, 13 Ga. 55 (2, 3), it was held that a "note payable to bearer only was a valid note, and that a note issued with
The terms “holder” and “bearer” are words of similar import, and where either of these words is employed in a note, the note may be made negotiable by delivery. Putnam v. Crymes (S. C.), 1 McMul. 9 (36 Am. Dec. 250). “Holder” is a word of the same import as “bearer,” and is applied to any one in actual or constructive possession .of the bill,- and entitled at law to recover or receive its contents from the parties to it. See 4 Words & Phrases, 3319, and cases cited.
Prom all of which it appears that the presumption in favor of a note in the hands of a holder thereof exists where the note is made payable to the order of the maker, and is by him properly indorsed. If a note payable to bearer merely, without mentioning any name, is a valid note, and a note issued with a blank for the payee’s name may be filled up by any bona fide holder with his own name as payee, and then be treated as a good promissory note, enjoying all the presumptions which such a note has under our statute, it is apparent that a note made payable as section 4270 of the Civil Code
Since it appears, from what has been stated above in regard to the original plea filed by the defendant, that this plea failed to allege that the plaintiff was not a bona fide holder of the note before due and for value, and simply asserted that the defendant “avers that he has notified the plaintiff of the circumstances on which the said note was given,” without alleging that this notice was given before the plaintiff in good faith purchased the note and paid therefor (even though it be assumed that this averment is intended to convey the idea that the plaintiff had been at some time informed by the defendant of all the alleged fraud practiced upon him by Smith & Connor), the plea was nevertheless fatally defective, and raised no issue to rebut the presumption in favor of the holder of the note, and the plaintiff did not have a “valid and legal” defense on file originally, for, construing the plea more strongly against the pleader, this allegation must be interpreted to mean that the notice referred to was given by the defendant to the plaintiff after the acquisition of the note for value and bona fide.
The judge therefore did not err in striking the original plea, regardless of whether or not the defense therein set up might have been a good and legal defense as against Smith & Connor or one who obtained the note after notice. “Where the only defenses set up by the defendant were without merit and were properly stricken, and a verdict and judgment were rendered against him, it was error for the court to sustain a motion, made during the term, to set aside the verdict and judgment so rendered, no defense being set up and offered to be pleaded, or shown to exist, except those properly stricken, and no meritorious ground for reopening the case appearing.” Murray v. Willoughby, 133 Ga. 514 (66 S. E. 267). The movant in this case insists that the rule laid down above is not applicable, since it appeared from the proposed amendment, which was verified by Pryor and offered in evidence, that the defendant did have a valid, meritorious defense. As we have already
It was said in Murray v. Willoughby, supra, referring to motions to set aside judgments, that, “motions of this character, as it has frequently been decided, are addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and this court will not interfere with .the exercise of that discretion where it does not appear that it was abused; and where there is any doubt as to whether or not the court, at the time of rendering the judgment setting aside and vacating a judgment previously rendered, exercised a sound discretion, this court, as a general rule, will not disturb the ruling of the court below.”
So that we may conclude by saying generally that this court, considering the record as a whole, not only sees no reason why the sound discretion of the trial court should be interfered with and the verdict and judgment set aside, but since, under the view we entertain as to the insufficiency of the motion, the trial court should have sustained the demurrer thereto, the judgment overruling the demurrer is reversed on the cross-bill of exceptions, and the main bill of exceptions is dismissed.
Judgment reversed on cross-bill of exceptions; main bill of exceptions dismissed.