114 Ga. 668 | Ga. | 1902
An action upon a promissory note was brought in the court below by W. B. Hudson, as surviving partner of L. N. Hudson & Brother, against Mrs. S. E. Clegg and C. R. Whitley. The latter signed the note apparently as principal. Mrs. Clegg filed a plea of non est factum. Whitley, among other things, set up that he was only a surety upon the note sued on, and prayed that in the event of a recovery by the plaintiff, the fact of suretyship be established by the judgment. There was a verdict for the plaintiff against both defendants. Each made a separate motion for a new trial, and the bill of exceptions now before us was sued out by Whitley, alleging error in the overruling of his motion. An examination of the record discloses that many interesting legal questions are involved in the controversy among the several parties to the present litigation. We shall, however, as we are bound to do, confine ourselves strictly to the points actually made and presented in Whitley’s motion for a new trial and insisted upon in the briefs filed in bis behalf. While the trial was in progress, his counsel offered to prove hy him as a witness that he signed the note sued on at the instance of the deceased L. N. Hudson; that the latter refused to make the loan evidenced by the note, unless Whitley would sign the same as surety; and that Whitley’s true relation to the paper was that of surety only. This testimony was objected to by counsel for the plaintiff, and ruled out, on the ground that, L. N. Hudson being dead, Whitley was incompetent to testify to any transaction between himself and the deceased. Unless Whitley was rendered incompetent by some provision of section 5269 of the
If, at the time Whitley offered to make this proof, allowing it would, for any reason, have delayed Hudson in the prosecution of his remedy, the rule would be different. A defendant, desiring to have the fact of suretyship established by the judgment to be rendered in favor of a plaintiff against himself and another, can not, if in laches or because of neglect which would result in delay to the plaintiff, avail himself of the statutory right now under discussion; otherwise, as in the present instance, he should be permitted to introduce any relevant evidence tending to establish the right in question. The case of Chamblee v. Davie, 88 Ga. 205, is relied on as authority for the proposition that as granting a new trial to one occupying the position of Whitley in the present case would necessarily result in delay to the plaintiff, it should, for this reason, be refused. In that case complaint was made of a charge on the ground that it nowhere gave the jury any opportunity to find that George L. Chamblee, who claimed to be a surety, did in fact sustain that relation to the paper sued on. This point was held to be not well taken, because the judge, in his instructions to the jury as to the form of their verdict, so shaped the same that they might have found that George L. Chamblee was in fact a surety, if they had seen proper to do so. Hence it w:as ruled that “the objection to the charge of the court as to the form of the verdict is not supported by the charge as set out in the motion for anew trial.” This ruling, as will be readily seen, dealt with the main and controlling point in the case with regard to the question of suretyship. If the third headnote in the case cited is capable of the construction placed upon it, as above indicated, by the counsel for the defend
Judgment reversed.