145 Ga. 507 | Ga. | 1916
1. Where a person owed an account, and was also incarcerated under a warrant charging the offense of “cheating and swindling,” if a settlement was effected by which the accused gave a note, which was also signed by two other persons, “in settlement of the account, if the charges would be dismissed or settled against” such person, such consideration was illegal and immoral, and the note could not be enforced, unless the settlement was made by approval and order of the court on examination into the merits of the ease, as provided by the Penal Code (1910), § 981.
(a) To a suit on a promissory note against two persons, a plea was filed that the note was given in part for the purpose of settling a criminal prosecution instituted by the plaintiff (McKee) against one Brown. In the bill of exceptions it is recited that the case was submitted to the presiding judge, without a jury, “on the following agreed statement
2. Penal Code § 723, which provides that the presiding judge may “permit the parties at interest to settle the prosecution” has reference only to the prosecution for the offense declared in the preceding section.
Judgment reversed.