173 Ga. 633 | Ga. | 1931
The exception in this case is to a judgment granting an interlocutory injunction. The order and opinion of the trial judge granting this relief, quoted below, so sufficiently delineates the facts in the ease that further statement thereof is unnecessary.
“Upon considering the above-stated petition for injunction, which was submitted to me by consent of the parties to be heard and determined in vacation, it appears: That on December 1, 1920, Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, through Farmers Land Loan & Title Company, negotiated with the defendant [plaintiff in error] a loan from defendant in the sum of $2000 principal, with interest, and to secure the payment of said loan conveyed to said defendant certain land by her security deed of said date, with power of sale therein authorizing the sale of the land by defendant for the purpose of the payment of the loan in default of payment thereof under the terms of the loan. The said Mrs. Williams paid a part of the principal and interest of the loan, which was paid through the said Farmers Land Loan and Title Company, but was
“There was a mass of correspondence and evidence submitted to me, from which I find the foregoing. The case is not without difficulty. There is no doubt the defendant [plaintiff] purchased the land and undertook to pay off the loan, believing the plaintiff
As appears from the foregoing, the contention of the plaintiff in error is that the amount assumed by the defendant in error on May 2, 1923, was the amount due by Mrs. Elizabeth Williams on this loan at that time, while the defendant in error claims that he only agreed to pay, in settlement of the debt due by Mrs. Williams to the plaintiff in error, the sum of $1860.90, plus an agreed prepayment charge or bonus of $74.44, and that after payment of the $1,000 made by his two cheeks aggregating that amount, he owed the lender only a balance of $860.90 with interest from May' 2, 1923, and the $74.44 prepayment charge. It is urged by counsel for the plaintiff in error in his brief, as to the negotiations between the defendant in error and the Farmers Land Loan & Title Co., that “He made this company either his own agent or treated with it as the agent of Mrs. Williams; and therefore no statement which the Farmers Land Loan & Title Co. may have made to him can, in any way, affect the plaintiff in error.” However this may have been at the outset of the negotiations, there is ample evidence to authorize the finding of the lower court that the agreement made by the defendant in error with the Farmers Land Loan & Title Co. was ratified by the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company. The plaintiff in error not only accepted the original payment of $1,000 made in carrying out the agreement made by the defendant in error with the Farmers Land Loan & Title Co., but continued from time to time to receive and obtain the full benefit of other payments. In these circumstances, there would seem to be such a ratification of the original agreement as
The only effect of the judgment of tire lower court granting the interlocutory injunction was to prevent the plaintiff in error from exercising the power of sale contained in its deed to secure debt at tlrat time. The contention of the plaintiff in error tlrat the defendant in error assumed payment of the entire amount due by Mrs. Elizabetli Williams to the plaintiff in error on May 2-, 1923, and that there is still a balance due thereon of $151, still remains for determination by a jury on the final hearing of the case.' Should the plaintiff in error prevail in this trial, it will have as security for this balance the land on which it originally loaned $2,000. The evidence submitted upon the interlocutory hearing would have authorized, though it would not have required, a jury to find in favor of the claim of the defendant in error that the payments made by him to the Volunteer State Life Insurance Co.. had more than paid the amount which he agreed to pay, and which the plaintiff in error agreed to accept in settlement of the claim of the latter against Mrs. Williams; and in the trial now under review the judge of tire superior court was the trior of the facts. We can not say that under the pleadings in this case, and the evidence adduced upon the interlocutory hearing now under consideration, the court abused its discretion in granting the interlocutory injunction. This' merely holds the matter in statu quo until the issues of fact between the parties can be determined by a jury upon the final trial. “The granting and continuing of injunctions must always rest in the sound discretion of the judge,
Judgment affirmed.