34 Ga. App. 620 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1925
Defendant in error filed suit against the plaintiff in error on a promissory note for $171.45 principal, the purchase-price of ten sacks of 9-2-2 and ten sacks of 8-2-2 guano, in ■which note it is recited that “The consideration of this note is the above mentioned commercial fertilizer sold to me by Swift & Company, which I hereby acknowledge have been accepted and received with the express understanding that there is no warranty whatsoever.” At the appearance term of the suit the defendant appeared and by her plea admitted a prima facie case, but denied that she was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum alleged, for the reason that she did not get ten sacks of the guano, of the value of $33.75. She further alleged that the reason she signed the note, “which contained one ton too much,” was that she did not know but that her husband had gotten the said ton, that she did not know how much fertilizer he had gotten from the plaintiff, that he was absent when the note was signed and she did not know the truth of the transaction until he returned, and had she known it, she would not have signed the note; that she relied upon the statements of the agent of the plaintiff, and that after learning of the mistake she did what she could to get the error corrected. No demurrer to the plea was filed, but upon the trial of the case the plaintiff made an oral motion to strike the defense, for the reason that it set forth no ground of defense. The court struck the defense and allowed the plaintiff to submit to the jury the note sued upon, and proof of the giving of notice as to attorney’s fees, whereupon the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount sued for. The defendant sued out a direct bill of exceptions complaining of the action of the court in striking her plea and directing a verdict against her.
1. “While a plea or answer which sets up no legal or equitable defense, being bad in substance, may be stricken on motion at the trial term, yet such a motion is not available where the plea states a substantial defense, but is merely deficient in certainty or particularity.” Bailey & Carney Buggy Co. v. Guthrie, 1 Ga. App. 350 (3) (58 S. E. 103). Accordingly, the contentions of defendant
2. It is a well-settled rule that “It is no defense to an action on a promissory note, that the maker relied on certain representations made by an agent of the payee at the time of its execution, and that it did not contain the contract as actually made; the note not having been signed under any emergency, and there being nothing to prevent the maker from reading it, and it not being-shown that the failure to read it was brought about by an actual fraud perpetrated by the agent of the payee at the time of its execution.” Walton Guano Co. v. Copelan, 112 Ga. 319 (1) (37 S. E. 411, 52 L. R. A. 268). See Tinsley v. Gullett Gin Co., 21 Ga. App. 512 (94 S. E. 892); Twyman v. Avera Loan &c. Co., 23 Ga. App. 136 (98 S. E. 239). Accordingly, the defendant would not be permitted to dispute or deny that she had knowingly signed the note, promising to pay the amount specified, representing the purchase-price of twenty sacks of fertilizer, and acknowledging the delivery and acceptance of the goods. See Stewart v. Hardin, 24 Ga. App. 611 (1) (96 S. E. 217). This, however, she does not undertake to do. She does not attack the expressed terms or contents of the instrument at all; nor does she contend that any term of. the intended agreement was omitted. What she in fact pleads isj that, while she admits the written promise to pay embodying a receipt for the goods constituting the consideration of the admitted promise, the consideration of her agreement has partially failed, for the reason that the receipt does not speak the truth, and that such mistaken admission on her part should not bind her, for the reason that she made such admission and promise upon the faith of the representation of the defendant that the amount of fertilizer receipted for had been actually delivered to her then-absent agent, and that upon discovery of the facts she repudiated the admission set forth by the written receipt. She is not seeking to set up a different consideration from' that which is expressed in the instrument. This she could not do, since the consideration is set forth
Judgment reversed.