16 Ga. App. 436 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
J. D. Dickson brought suit against W. C. Seawright on a promissory note dated March 21, 1913, and due 30 days after date, for $700 principal, with interest after maturity and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. In his petition he alleged, that, as collateral security for the payment of the note sued on, the defendant pledged 18 shares of stock in the Guarantee Trust & Banking Company. Attached to the petition was a copy of the note, which recited the pledge of these 18 shares as collateral security. The defendant filed a plea admitting the execution of the note, but denying his indebtedness thereon, because the consideration for which it was given had totally failed, and because there was a total want of consideration. The defendant further alleged, that the plaintiff practiced a fraud on him when the note was executed, for it was given, together with $200 cash, as the purchase-price for the 18 shares of stock referred to in the petition, which stock “was totally worthless when sold to the defendant by plaintiff, and plaintiff knew or ought to have known that the stock was worthless, and of no value in the market.” The defendant alleged further that he was not indebted to the plaintiff on the note sued upon, because “the 18 shares of bank stock sold defendant by plaintiff were utterly worthless when sold him and when the note was executed, and plaintiff knew the stock was worthless when he sold it to defendant, and the consideration of said note was the éighteen shares of stock alleged to be collateral security, and said stock was without any market value on the 21st day of March, 1913 [the date when the note was executed], and is still without any market value, and has been without any market value for and during the time the note was executed and at present time. Defendant has obtained no benefit from the purchase of said stock, and defendant [plaintiff] has maintained [sustained] no loss on account of said contract.” The .defendant prayed judgment for the $200 cash paid by him to the plaintiff as part of the purchase-price of the bank stock alleged to be worthless, and denied any indebtedness for attorney’s fees, etc. The note sued iipon was dated March 21, 1913, and was due 30 days after date. The suit was filed October 14, 1913, and the original plea was filed October 21, 1913.
On June 19, 1914, the case came on for- trial, and the defendant filed an amendment to his plea, in which amendment he set out that the 18 shares of stock purchased by him from the plaintiff, for
The amendment offered, it is true, alleges fraud on the part of Miles and Dickson, but fails to indicate in what the particular fraud consisted. It is true that in the amendment it is alleged that • Dickson and Miles conspired together to sell worthless stock to him, which they knew at the time to be worthless, but it is not alleged that in order to induce the defendant to purchase the stock, which he asserts was at the time of the purchase worthless, any misrepresentation was made by either Miles or Dickson; and in fact the only definite reason assigned for the conclusion that a conspiracy was formed between Miles and Dickson to perpetrate a fraud upon the defendant is that the stock sold to him was in fact the property of Miles, and not of Dickson, and that Dickson was acting merely as agefit for Miles in .effecting the transfer. How or in what way this would affect the validity of the transaction we are unable to discover from the pleadings, since it is not suggested that upon the payment of his note the defendant would be for this reason unable to obtain possession of the 18 shares of stock. The 4th par
The original plea alleged, as already stated, that the 18 shares of bank stock were utterly worthless when sold to the defendant and when the note was executed by him, and that the plaintiff knew this fact, and also that the stock was then without any market value and it has not since had any market value, and that the defendant obtained no benefit from the purchase of the stock and . the plaintiff suffered no loss on account of his contract of sale. The • Civil Code,'§ 5675, is as follows: “Whenever an action shall be .■•commenced at common law, founded upon any contract, the de
The expression in Smith v. Smith, 36 Ga. 184-190 (91 Am. D. 761), that “the solemnity of a sealed instrument imports consideration, or, to speak more accurately, it estops a covenantor from denying a consideration, except for fraud,” appears to have been merely an obiter, and a' different rule is recognized by the courts of this State at this time. Even in the older case of Albertson v. Halloway, 16 Ga. 377, it was held that “a plea of failure of consid- ' eration, without fraud, may be pleaded to a note which is a joint and several promise to pay by two, which purports to be over the hand and seal of the makers, and has a seal or scroll affixed to the name of one, the other signing with his own proper hand, as security.” In that case the court said: “We believe that the rule, that a plea of failure of consideration can not be used as a defense ■ to a specialty, applies to no other instrument, save such as were
In Slaton v. Fowler, 124 Ga. 955 (53 S. E. 567), it was said that “at common law, as a general rule, a seal imported a consideration, and a contract under seal was not open to attack on the ground that it was without consideration. Whether this rule applies to a promissory note under seal so as to prevent a plea of want of consideration, or whether the seal only raises a presumption of a consideration, which can be rebutted, has never been definitely decided in this State; but it has been held that failure of consideration could be pleaded to a note under seal.” Later the point was expressly ruled upon by this court in the case of Sims v. Scheussler, 5 Ga. App. 850 (64 S. E. 99), where it was said that “either want of consideration or failure of consideration may generally be pleaded to a contract under seal;” and in another decision, handed down on the same day, Judge Powell gave an interesting and able discussion of the precise question, and the court held that “it is a good defense to an action on a negotiable promissory note under seal, in the hands of the original payee, that it was executed without any lawful consideration;” and also held that “in this State an equitable defense not involving affirmative relief or extraordinary remedy may be filed to any action at law in any of the courts. Hence, to an action in a city court on a note under seal, the defense of lack of consideration may be successfully pleaded.” Lacey v. Hutchinson, 5 Ga. App. 865 (1, 5), 878 (64 S. E. 105). This ruling was approved in Williams-Thompson Co. v. Williams, 10 Ga. App. 251-253 (73 S. E. 409), where this court held that “at common law a release under seal conclusively imported a con■sideration, but this is not now true, as respects the American States generally (Williston-Wald’s Pollock on Contracts, 813), or as respects Georgia in particular.” The decision in Lacey v. Hutchinson, supra, was again referred to by this court in Sasser v. McGovern, 11 Ga. App. 88 (74 S. E. 797); and in Strickland v. Farmers Supply Co., 14 Ga. App. 661 (82 S. E. 161), this court said that “the consideration of a promissory note may be a legitimate subject of inquiry though the note be under seal,” and that “it is no longer an open question in this court” that the fact “that a promissory note, even though executed under seal, was ex
The question remaining for determination is whether the original plea sufficiently set up a plea of total want of consideration to withstand the general demurrer thereto, bearing in mind that it is not absolutely essential to the validity of such a plea (under some of the rulings above cited) that fraud be alleged; for in this plea there is no specific allegation of any act of fraud, nor is there any attempt to allege such concealment on the part .of Dickson as to the value of the stock sold to the defendant as might amount to fraud under the provisions of section 4114 of the Civil Code. It is true that the defendant asserts that the plaintiff “practiced a fraud on the defendant when he executed said note, in that the 18 shares of bank stock (the consideration of said note) was wholly worthless when sold to defendant by plaintiff, and plaintiff knew or ought to have known that this stock was worthless and of no value in the market;” but it does not appear that the defendant made any direct inquiry as to the value of the stock and that the plaintiff evaded the truth, or that any confidential relation existed between them whereby the defendant had the right to expect full communication of the facts from the plaintiff, or that the defendant was laboring under any delusion with respect to the property sold, “or the condition of the other party,” and the plaintiff knew this and yet kept silence, or that the concealment was of intrinsic qualities, or that the actual value of the article could not, by the exercise of ordinary prudence and caution, have been discovered by the other party. The issue presented therefore, is whether, as against a general demurrer, a total want of consideration was sufficiently pleaded by the allegations that the stock purchased by the defendant, and for which he executed the note sued upon, was without market value and wholly worthless when sold to him by the plaintiff and when the note was executed, and that it ever since remained without any value, that the plaintiff, at the time of the sale, knew that it was wholly worthless, and that the defendant obtained no benefit from the purchase of said stock, and the plaintiff sus
The case of Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Anderson, 13 Ga. App. 772 (80 S. E. 32), is quite different from the present case on the facts. That ease went to trial, and the evidence not only developed that the defendant had bought the stock in question from an agent upon his representations as to its future market value, which de
Enough can be found in the original plea of the defendant in this case to make at least a clear and definite statement that The stock for which the note was given was altogether without value, and that the seller was aware of this fact at the time of the sale. What the proof may show and how the case may finally present itself is of course a matter which the future will alone develop. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer and striking the original plea. Judgment reversed.