18 Ga. App. 450 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
1. A note in form, “We promise to pay,” etc., “and, whether maker, indorser, or surety, severally agree to pay all costs of collection,” reciting that it is “given under the hand and seal of each party,” and signed, on one line, “Spiller-Beall Co. (L. S.),” and directly below, on the next line, “B. J. Spiller, Pres.,” is the note of the corporation, and is not the joint note of Spiller-Beall Company and E. J. Spiller.
2. Testimony of the plaintiff, that when the note “was discounted and he got the money, it was [his] note,” was not a mere conclusion of the witness, but a statement of fact.
3. The plaintiff presented the note to the court as its holder, and the holder of a negotiable note is presumed to be the bona fide owner thereof, and for value; and “unless the defendant negatives one or both of these facts, he is shut off from any defense which he might
4. In a suit brought by a holder of a promissory note, where the defendant pleads that the note is without consideration, the burden is on the defendant to sustain the plea. Gallagher v. Kiley, 115 Ga. 420 (41 S. E. 613).
5. Under the evidence it appears that Spiller was the president of the corporation, and his contract evidenced by the note sued upon binds the corporation. Dobbins v. Pyrolusite Manganese Co., 75 Ga. 450.
6. The note sued on in this case was given under the hand and seal of the party bound. “To render a private writing an instrument under seal, according to the code, it is only necessary that it recite in the body that a seal is used or contemplated, [and] that a scrawl or any other mark intended as a seal be annexed or affixed. A printed L.S. following the signature is a sufficient mark to satisfy the latter requisite.” Stansell v. Corley, 81 Ga. 453 (S. E. 868); see also 82 Ga. 883, errata; N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Rhodes, 4 Ga. App. 25 (4, 5), 28 (60 S. E. 828).
7. The evidence for the plaintiff made out a prima facie case for admitting in evidence the note sued on, and the court did not err in admitting it. Having been properly allowed in evidence, and being an instrument under seal, the defendant could plead, (1) non est factum, (2) gambling, illegal or immoral consideration, or (3) fraud in its procurement. “A bona fide purchaser for value of a genuine negotiable promissory note, who received the same before maturity and without notice of any defect or defense, is entitled to have a judgment thereon against the makers, although the latter, as against the payee, may have a good defense, unless it be shown that the note was founded on a gaming or immoral and illegal consideration, or there was fraud in the procurement of the note.” Jenkins v. Jones, 108 Ga. 556 (34 S. E. 149). A plea of non est factum was filed in this case, and the evidence warranted the court in allowing the introduction of the note in evidence, and 'made out a prima facie case of its execution.
8. A plea of failure of consideration was filed in this case as against the holder of the paper, presumably a bona fide holder and for value. Such a plea can not be sustained as against such a holder unless the evidence shows that the holder had notice of such failure of consideration, or that the facts and circumstances were sufficient to put a reasonably prudent person on guard. While the holder of such a paper may know the nature and character of the consideration, it is essential that the failure of consideration be known to him, or that the facts and circumstances of the case be sufficient to put him, as a reasonably prudent man, upon notice that there was a failure of consideration, and the burden of proof is on the defendant setting up
9. While the evidence might have showzi that the holder knew what the consideration was, it nowhere shows that he knew that the consideration had failed; and therefore the defendant did not carry the burden - placed upon him by the law. “The evidence in this case being sufficient to justify a finding that the plaintiff was . . an innocent purchaser of the note in controversy and that the [officer] of the corporation [who signed the note] had authority to make . . promissory notes in its corporate name, the verdict against the corporation was warranted.” Jacobs’ Pharmacy Co. v. Southern Banking & Trust Co., 97 Ga. 573 (25 S. E. 171). Upon the propositiozi that the note sued upozi was made to an officer of the corporation, and that that fact alone was sufficient to put the holder of the note upon guard, in Kaiser v. United States National Bank, 99 Ga. 258 (25 S. E. 620), which counsel for the defendant in ez’ror (in view of the somewhat bellicose souzzd of the title of that case) cites as being “in a legal forum and not upon the field of glory,” Chief Justice Simmons said: “The mere fact that the president of that bank negotiated the note for his own personal benefit to a third pez-son, who knew he was such president, would not of itself be notice .to that person that this action of the president was unauthorized or improper’, nor would this fact be sufficient, without more, to put the third person upon inquiry as to the legality or correctness of the president’s conduct in the premises.”
10. The bill of exceptions recites: “At this point the jury retired and defendant’s counsel, in order to complete the record, offered to prove' . that when the contract of November 1, 1913, was entered into, whereby Spiller and Beall bought the Benjamin-Ozburn Company, it was agreed that Beall was to contribute $1,000 more to the capital of the partnership than Spillez-, and that the $1,000 note was given by R. J. Spiller without authority of the corporation and was given to pay that $1,000 to J. A. Beall, and that the corporation had never sanctioned it. The court declined to admit the proof offered;” to which ruling the
11. The court did not err in directing a verdict for the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.