It appears from the record that the plaintiffs in error on December 20, 1912, executed and delivered to Dixie Chemical & Mining Company, of Columbus, Ga., a note for $1,500, payable at the Bank of Southwestern Georgia, Americus, Ga. The note, as appears from its face, is non-negotiable. The consideration expressed in one part of it is "value received,” but there were inserted, as the concluding phrase of the instrument and impliedly expressive of the real consideration, the words, "Part rental of plant of Dixie Chemical & Mining Company, as per terms of lease of even date.” The court admitted the contract of lease or rental referred to in the note, and excluded testimony tending to show negotiations and understandings between M. E. Thompson Jr., the president of the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company, and the defendants anterior to the making of the contract of December 20, 1912; and the exclusion of this evidence forms the basis of the exceptions most strenuously insisted upon by the plaintiffs in error. The so-called contract or paper which was repelled by the court was never signed by the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company or any
It would be impracticable to discuss in detail 'the voluminous record in this case. In addition to the general grounds of the motion for a new trial it contains 25 grounds, alleging errors in the charge of the court as delivered, error in refusing to give instructions requested by the defendants, and error in the admission and exclusion of testimony. We have carefully examined the pleadings, the evidence, and each of the assignments of error contained in the motion for a new trial. Some of the assignments of error are too incomplete to present any question for adjudication. ’One of the requests for instructions, the refusal of which is assigned as error, is appended to the motion for a new trial as an exhibit, and consists of numerous requests en bloc, some of which were not appropriate or adjusted to the evidence, and therefore the court was authorized to refuse all of them;'and as it contains in several instances references merely by number to code sections, and mere citations of decisions, the court could not in any view of the case have treated it as a written request for definite instructions. Thompson v. O’Connor, 115 Ga. 120 (5), 123 (41 S. E. 242).
There are several grounds of the motion for a new trial in which
Several exceptions are based upon the refusal of the court to give instructions to the effect that the defendant, being entitled to inquire into the consideration of the note, was entitled to show, although the note and contract denominated the consideration as “rent,” that this was not the real consideration. It is insisted by the defendant that antecedent to and perhaps contemporaneously with the execution of the contract of December 20, 1912, the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company, by parol agreement, constituted Wallis and Gartner quasi trustees for the purpose of operating its plant. It was contended that under this agreement the Dixie
The court, by amendment, allowed the defendants to plead failure of consideration as against Miss Heard, fraud in the procurement of the note, set-off of any expenditures made by the defendants upon which they insisted, during the period of time prior to the making of the contract on December 20, 1912, and in fact sus
The judge did not err in refusing to give several of the instructions requested by the defendants which embodied the principles relating to the rights of the plaintiff as a bona fide purchaser of a negotiable instrument for value and before maturity. It was admitted by the plaintiff that the instrument was not a negotiable instrument, and the judge not only ruled, in the admission of testimony, but he explicitly charged the jury, that the rule protecting bona fide purchasers of negotiable instruments before maturity did not apply to the plaintiff, and that the defendants were let in to any defense which they would- have had against the original payee. Under the evidence submitted in support of each and all of the defendants’ pleas, and, we think, upon sufficient evidence, the jury found that Miss Heard was entitled to recover as much as the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company would have been entitled to recover, and no more.
The defendants were permitted to introduce' testimony to show that they were induced to enter into the contract by the alleged fraudulent representations of Thompson, the president and general manager of the corporation, but the jury were not compelled to find that the action should be defeated on account of the fraud of the original holder of the note, in view of the testimony that the defendants had operated the plant of the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company for several months before the lease was executed and the notes given. They were thoroughly familiar with the premises and property of the company and their condition at the time- of entering into the contract and giving the several notes, one of which was the note sued on. The court would not have been authorized to instruct the jury that they could find as a set-off to the plaintiff’s demand repairs and improvements during the period embraced in the contract of rental, since there was no evidence that the defendants called the attention of the landlord to the necessity for these repairs or improvements, and were compelled to make them on account of the landlord’s refusal to repair, or failure to make the
We have already shown that the trial judge properly excluded the testimony as to the antecedent negotiations, understandings, and agreements between the parties prior to the execution of the contract of December 20, 1912, upon the ground that the effect of this testimony would have been to contradict and vary the terms of the written contract by parol, in the absence of any contention that the execution of the contract was due to fraud, accident, or mistake. The admission of the parol testimony offered by the defendants as to this point would have been in the very teeth of section 4268 of the Civil Code. However, this testimony was properly excluded by the court for another reason. Under the ruling of the court Miss Heard, the plaintiff, was placed in the same position that the Dixie' Chemical & Mining Company would have occupied had the suit been brought in the name of the corporation itself instead of in that of the holder. Had the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company sued upon the note, the defendants could not have been let more fully into their legitimate defenses than they were under the sweeping ruling of the court in their favor. If the suit had been brought by the corporation, and the defendants had sought to defend upon the ground that the contract of December 20, 1912, did not speak the real contract, or, to put it more strongly, that that contract was a fraud upon the defendants, in that, while it specified that the consideration was the rent of the property leased, the real consideration for the contract was an agreement on the part of the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company to allow the defendants to, operate the
Had the defendants in the present case shown that all the contracts and agreements which they insisted were made were formally executed by the corporation, these contracts would have been void, because it was ultra vires for the corporation to enter a partnership. Such agreements would also have been void in the absence of proof of other notice than, that possessed by Thompson, because, pro re nata, his powers as an officer of the Dixie Chemical & Mining Company were suspended. He was contracting with the corporation. He was buying or renting, as the case might be, while the corporation was selling or assuming the position of landlord, and it can not be supposed, though he was an officer of the corporation, that he was co-operating with them in selling when he was the buyer, or in obtaining advantageous terms for the corporation as a landlord when he was to be one of those to pay the rent. And whether he did or did not, it can not be presumed that he made any disclosure which would have prejudiced his own interest. In Morris v. Georgia Loan Co., 109 Ga. 12, 24 (34 S. E. 378, 46 L. R. A. 506), the Supreme
We conclude, upon a review of the entire record, that the trial was fair and free from error, the verdict was authorized by the evidence, and the court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial. Judgment affirmed.