146 Ga. 51 | Ga. | 1916
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “I pause for a moment, to charge you that the law in regard to an indorser avoiding his indorsement on the ground of usury on the note is that he is ignorant of the usury. If he knows of the usury —if his eyes are open to the fact, he has no protection under the law. The law makes his obligation binding when he is conscious of it at the time he signs the note; or if he ratifies it, if he indorses it, if he accepts it after he has signed it, he is equally beyond the
2. The court also instructed the jury thus: “The basis of the defense in this ease is ignorance during any part of this transaction; because if the indorser becomes aware of the usury in the contract, then his relation to the matter must be one of repudiation. It must be one of denial. He must have nothing further to do with that contract. If he accepts it he is bound by it — bound from the beginning upon the whole contract.” This charge is error. If the defendants indorsing the note were ignorant, at the time they indorsed, of the concealed usury and discovered it after-wards, it would not be necessary for them to take any active steps to repudiate the note or to disaffirm their liability, until sued. They were not bound to act when knowledge of the existence of the usury came to them subsequently to the indorsement of the note; but the jury may have inferred, from the language contained in this charge., that if the indorsers became aware of the usury subsequently to the execution of the note, they should take steps to annul the contract or to disaffirm their liability upon it. The charge, of course, was probably intended to instruct the jury that if the indorsers knew of the existence of the usury at the time of the giving of the note, then they should have refused to indorse it, and that if they did indorse it under those circumstances, they would be bound; but that is not the effect.of the language employed, by the court.
3. Complaint is made of the following charge of the court: “I charge you that if they knew the collateral was not there, or, I
4. Under the evidence and the pleadings the jury were required to find against the principal on the note, but not required to find against the indorsers; and, moreover, there might have been a verdict against some of the indorsers and not against all of them. Consequently the court should not have charged the jury, in giving instructions as to the form of verdict, that the form should be, “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff,” or “We, the jury, find for the defendants,” but should have given them instructions covering the various verdicts authorized by the evidence, and should also have instructed them to state in their verdict the amounts found as principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, if they should find in favor of the plaintiff.
Inasmuch as the verdict in this ease must be set aside for the reasons stated, the judgment also falls; and it is unnecessary to
Judgment reversed.