3 Ga. App. 200 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The' Bainbridge Oil Company foreclosed a chattel mortgage against B. A. Sheffield, and the mortgage fi. fa. was levied on Jim and Dave, two young horse' mules. The defendant
1. We shall consider the second question first. The motion to rule out the evidence of the witness as to the sending of the notice and as to the contents of the notice should have been sustained. The written notice was the best evidence of its contents, and the proper foundation had not been laid for the introduction of secondary evidence. No notice to produce had been served on the defendant, and no attempt was made to show the loss or destruction of the original notice. See Western Union Tel. Co. v. Bates, 93 Ga. 352 (20 S. E. 639); Holcombe v. State, 28 Ga. 66; McAfee v. State, 85 Ga. 438 (11 S. E. 810); Jackson v. Jackson, 47 Ga. 100; Kerr v. State, 105 Ga. 655 (31 S. E. 739); Western Union Tel. Co. v. Hines, 94 Ga. 430 (20 S. E. 349); Tilley v. Cox, 119 Ga. 867 (47 S. E. 219). Parol evidence of the original notice can not properly be received until at least the instrumentalities of or
2. We can not concur in the proposition that, because the obligation to pay attorney’s fees- is embodied in a chattel mortgage, it presents any exception to the general rule as to such obligations. It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff in error that the act of 1900 should be strictly construed. It is true that the original Twitty bill (embodied in the Civil Code, §3667) made all obligations to pay attorney’s fees void, unless the defendant filed a plea and failed to sustain it. The act of 1900, amending §3667, introduced: into that section an exception, and is limited by a proviso.' It is only when the exception has arisen, and after the mandate of the proviso has been complied with, that any liability for attorney’s fees arises. In Mt. Vernon Bank v. Gibbs, 1 Ga. App. 662 (58 S. E. 269), we have referred to the fact that the allowance of attorney’s fees upon evidence of indebtedness is not specially favored by our code. It is only under the provision of an exception to the general rule (that the obligation to pay attorney’s fees is void) that a promise to pay attorney’s fees, contained in a note or other evidence of indebtedness, can be enforced. However much we may-doubt the propriety of the law, which apparently discriminates against promises to pay attorney’s fees, nevertheless, as this is the apparent policy of the State, those rights dependent upon the exception will be strictly construed. But there is no reason why the obligation to pay attorney’s fees should be more strictly construed because it is contained in a mortgage. The act itself says, “upon, any note or other evidence of indebtedness.” The real difficulty arises from the fact that the debtor can be relieved from attorney’s fees if he pays the debt before return day, and in many cases-of mortgage foreclosure there is, strictly speaking, no return day. In the case of the Mt. Vernon Bank, supra, we gave the meaning: of the term “return day,” as heretofore defined in this State, and. as applicable to ordinary suits. If no issue is made to a mortgage foreclosure, it differs, of course, from an ordinary suit; but if an issue is made, there is no material difference. We hold, that if the notice be given ten days prior to the affidavit of foreclosure and
If the judge had been right in his ruling on the evidence which the defendant’s counsel moved to exclude, he would have been authorized to give the charge upon the subject of attorney’s fees which is complained of. The charge was a correct statement of law, but inasmuch as the judge had erred in not excluding the evidence upon this subject, for the reasons we have heretofore stated, the evidence was not legally before the jury. For this reason the charge of the judge was, in the present case, erroneous-The presentation of the subject of attorney’s fees was a repetition and continuation of his former error in not excluding the evidence upon this subject from the jury.
3. Without deciding whether the rulings excluding the testimony in behalf of the plaintiff were correct or not, the verdict in its behalf was not supported as to the interest (there being several ad
■ Judgment reversed.