29 Ga. App. 660 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1923
The trade acceptance or inland bill of exchange sued upon shows affirmatively that it was accepted by the drawee (the Tennille Yarn Mills), and therefore the contract of the defendant (the drawer) was one of suretyship. The case of Bank of Richland v. Nicholson, 120 Ga. 622 (48 S. E. 240), which was a suit upon an inland bill of exchange, is authority for this statement. It was held in that case that “ The contract of the drawer is that if the drawee does not accept he will pay, and that if the drawee does not pay after acceptance he will. See, in this connection, Manry v. Waxelbaum, 108 Ga. 14 (33 S. E. 701). After acceptance the contract of the drawer is one of suretyship (Davis v. Baker, 71 Ga. 33), and between the drawing and the acceptance it is one in the nature of suretyship.” (Italics ours.) See, in this connection, Preston v. Dozier, 135 Ga. 25 (68 S. E. 793). Thus, the defendant, if liable at all, was liable as a surety; and, under the ruling of this court in Watkins Medicine Co. v. Marbach, 20 Ga. App. 694 (93 S. E. 270), he cannot defeat such liability by merely-proving that he received no monetary consideration, but in order
Conceding, but not deciding (the exceptions pendente lite not being argued by the plaintiff in error), that the foregoing plea was good as a plea of failure or want of consideration, we are still of the opinion that the admission of the evidence complained of in the 1st and 2d grounds of the motion for a new trial was error, because it was in parol and contradicted the absolute and unqualified promise of the defendant to pajr a given sum of money where there was “a specific consideration actually agreed on and expressed in the writing." In Sasser v. McGovern, 11 Ga. App. 88 (74 S. E. 797), Judge Pottle, speaking for this court, said: “Keduced to its last analysis, the effort of the defendant in this case is to defeat a plain, unconditional promise to pay, by proof of an oral contemporaneous agreement to the effect that he had really never made any promise to pay. If at the time the note was executed the bank had entered into a written stipulation agreeing not to sue the defendant upon the note, and in effect releasing him from liability thereon, such an agreement would have been valid and binding. Marlin v. Monroe, 107 Ga. 330 (33 S. E. 621). But we know of no principle, nor has any decision been called to our attention, which supports the proposition that a written promise may be defeated by proof of an oral agreement not to enforce it. The decisions are directly to the contrary. See Mansfield v. Barber, 59 Ga. 851; Johnson v. Cobb, 100 Ga. 139 (28 S. E. 72).” See Hirsch v. Oliver, 91 Ga. 554 (2) (18 S. E. 354); Bullard v. Brewer, 118 Ga. 918, 920 (45 S. E. 711), and cit.; Watkins v. Woodbery, 24 Ga. App. 80, 83 (100 S. E. 34); Sikes v. Payton, 23 Ga. App. 721 (99 S. E. 310). The court evidently admitted the evidence set out in these grounds of the motion upon the idea that one may always inquire into the consideration of a written instrument, and that proof of what the consideration in fact was. does not have the effect of varying an unconditional contract in writing. However, the evidence the admission of which is complained of was altogether insufficient to show a want of considera
The court erred also in charging the jury, as complained of in the motion for a new trial, that if thé defendant notified the plaintiff to 'sell the collateral, and the plaintiff failed to comply with such instruction and failed to sell the collateral, then the plaintiff would be liable for damages, and the jury, if they found that the cotton had declined on the market after notice was given, should charge the plaintiff with the decline; and further that if, at the time of the notice to sell, the cotton would have been sufficient to pay the note or the balance due thereon, and -the plaintiff failed to sell, the plaintiff could not recover. This charge was error,, because the pleadings did not authorize these instructions. The defendant’s plea set up merely that the plaintiff sold the cotton wrongfully and converted it to his own use, without consulting the defendant, and the plea nowhere claimed damages of any character.
It follows, from .what has been said, that the judgment of the lower court overruling the motion for a new trial should be
Reversed.