Scudder v. Puckett

12 Ga. 337 | Ga. | 1852

By the Court.

Warner J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] This bill was filed to obtain anew trial, in a cause which had been determined at Law, between the parties. The complainant had sued the defendant for the amount of a promissory note, which had been placed in the hands of one Daniel, for collection; and which the latter transferred to the defendant after it became due, without authority of the complainant, w'ho was the true owner of the paper. According to the ruling of this Court, in Thomas vs. Kinsey, (8 Geo. R. 421,) the complainant ought to have recovered the amount of his note on the trial at Law, as the facts are stated in his bill. It was his privilege to have excepted to the decision of the Court in that case, *339and to have had the error corrected ; but he thought proper to acquiesce in that judgment, and we are not aware of any precedent in Equity jurisprudence, which will authorize us to interfere in his behalf. The only ground upon which the complainant seeks to be relieved, is that Langston Worley, a witness who was absent from the State, at the time of the trial, whose residence was unknown at that time, has since returned — and will prove that Puckett, the defendant, received the note with full knowledge of the fact that Daniel had no authority to transfer it. This evidence of Worley would only be cumulative of that which was had on the trial at Law. The note having been past due when Pucket received it from Daniel, necessarily charged him with notice; that fact of itself, was sufficient to have entitled the complainant to have recovered, upon shewing his title to the paper, as against the defendant, who purchased it from one who had no title. So far as the legal title to the note was concerned, on the trial at Law, the evidence of Worley will only establish what the law presumed the fact to have been, on that trial.

This Court held, in Thomas vs. Kinsey, that one who purchases a note after it is due, from one who has no title to it, acquires no title against the true owner. i

The insuperable barrier in the way of the complainant, is that he acquiesced in the judgment of the Court on the trial at Law, and thereby lost the remedy which was open to him. A bill in Equity for a new trial, is watched with extreme jealousy. Smith vs. Long, 1 John. Ch. R. 323.

Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.

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