97 Ga. 238 | Ga. | 1895
1. Where no evidence of any kind is introduced in support of a given plea, the court may state to the jury that such is the fact.
2. Although the note sued upon was, on its face, payable in- the State of New York, where the charge or reservation of a greater rate of interest than six per cent, was not only unlawful, but made the contract utterly void, yet as the payee was presumably a resident of New York, and the rate of interest specified in the note, viz. eight per cent., was legal in Georgia, and as it affirmatively appeared that the note was executed in the latter State, was given for the purchase of land therein situate, and contained a waiver of the benefit of the homestead and exemptions provided for by the constitution and laws of Georgia, and there being no evidence tending to show .any device or contrivance to' evade’the usury laws of New York, the jury were warranted in inferring that the parties had not voluntarily entered into a contract to be carried out in accordance with the laws of New York, under which it would be void; and accordingly, they were authorized to find that these parties had in view the law of Georgia, and not the law of New York, in fixing the rate of interest.
3. In Odom v. New England Mortgage Security Co., 91 Ga. 505, it was not ruled that the note there sued upon was in fact usurious; but simply that it was open to attack for usury, and that the court erred in rejecting certain competent evidence offered by the defendant for this purpose. Besides, in that case it did not appear that' the note itself was executed in the State of Georgia. Judgment affirmed.