96 Ga. 227 | Ga. | 1895
The Georgia Loan and Trust Company sued Stansell upon two promissory notes, each for $600.00 principal, with interest from their date at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, paj’able semi-annually, and due December 1st, 1893. They stipulated that both principal and interest should be payable at a named bank in New York city, and that if default should be made in the payment
Although, as already stated, the notes were made payable to the Geoi’gia Loan and Trust Company, it distinctly appeared by the uncoutradicted testimony that this company had really no interest whatever in making the loan; did not actually lend the money; and that the notes were made thus payable simply as a matter of convenience in obtaining the loan from other parties ; that the money was really loaned by a company in Connecticut, to whom the Georgia Loan and Trust Company indorsed the notes; but after default was made by Stan-sell, the latter company paid off the actual lender in full, and thus became, for the first time, the real owner of the notes, and therefore brought suit upon them in its own name and right.
There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant excepted to the overruling of his motion for a new trial. This motion contained numerous grounds, but the case, upon its substantial merits, is controlled by the propositions announced in the head-notes.
1. It will be seen, from the foregoing condensed statement of the facts, that this case is in all material par
2. In its other elements, the case at bar very closely resembles, and is controlled by, that of Hughes v. Griswold, 82 Ga. 299. Iu that case the note sued upon was made payable to Tallman, one of the “middlemen” engaged in procuring the loan for Griswold, the borrower. It was there held, that even though the firm of which Tallman was a member advanced its own money in turning over the net proceeds of the loan to the borrower, this fact did not infect the loan with usury, although Tallman’s firm received a portion of the commissions paid by the borrower for negotiating the loan, it appearing that the substitution of this firm’s money in place of that of the actual lender was only a means of exchange, resorted to for convenience merely. Substantially the same state of facts was shown in the case now before us, by the testimony of Coleman, the treasurer of the Georgia Loan and Trust Company, which was not disputed by any witness.
While there may be evidence in the record sufficient to raise a suspicion of usui’y in the transaction between this company and the defendant Stansell, yet the jury were amply warranted in finding that the notes sued
Judgment affirmed.