Brooks v. Hooks

144 S.E.2d 96, 221 Ga. 229, 1965 Ga. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 14, 1965
Docket23001
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 144 S.E.2d 96 (Brooks v. Hooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Hooks, 144 S.E.2d 96, 221 Ga. 229, 1965 Ga. LEXIS 423 (Ga. 1965).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

This is a controversy over financing the purchase and feeding of chickens for egg production.

It took the form of litigation when a petition was filed in the Superior Court of Emanuel County by Donald J. Hooks and others, trading as the Farmers Feed & Pelleting Company (hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff company), against Ralph M. Brooks, Master Feed and Grain Company, Inc. (hereinafter designated as the Grain Company), and McMillen Feeder Finance Corporation (hereinafter denominated as the Finance Company). The petition sought cancellation of two chattel mortgages and notes, injunction against their transfer or enforcement, damages, and general relief. Upon the overruling of general and special demurrers of the defendants, the trial court, by agreement of the parties, considered the verified petition and answers as evidence and temporarily enjoined the defendants from transferring the mortgages and notes and from attempting to enforce their collection. Nope of the special demurrers raised any issue as to duplicity.

Error is assigned upon the overruling of the demurrers and the grant of the injunction.

The petition, insofar as material here, made the allegations which follow.

The plaintiffs are engaged in selling feed and other such products.

The defendant Brooks is an agent of the defendants Grain Company and Finance Company. The Grain Company is an agent of the Finance Company.

*231 In late 1962 or early 1963 Brooks requested that the plaintiff company act as dealer for the Grain Company and the Finance Company’s chicken feed, in accordance with a plan, already in effect with others, substantially as follows.

Brooks would find farmers with facilities to feed and care for laying chickens and would outline to them a plan whereby a dealer would furnish financing for putting chickens in the houses and ■ feeding them until they began production. The farmer would execute to the dealer a chattel mortgage on the chickens and a note. When production began the dealer would receive 80% of the egg proceeds until the chickens and the feed were paid for, and after such payment all of the proceeds would go to the fanner.

As between the dealer and the defendants, the plan was that, when Brooks found farmers who agreed to go into the transaction, he would obtain a financial statement from them and submit it to the Finance Company. If the latter approved the farmer’s credit, Brooks would prepare an open-end chattel mortgage and note for a specified amount per chicken and have it executed by the farmer. The note and mortgage would then be transferred by the dealer to the Finance Company which would; upon receipt of them and an invoice showing that the chickens had been delivered to the farmer, send the dealer the proceeds for the note. These proceeds were actually payment for the chickens and some of the feed. Payments on the note would be scheduled so that the Finance Company would be repaid from the first eight months of egg production. The Grain Company would furnish to the dealer, on a 30 day account basis, the concentrate to be used in the feed sold to the farmer. If the fanner was still indebted to the dealer after the dealer paid the note to the Finance Company, it would transfer the note and mortgage back to the dealer. Under this program the dealer was never to own the chickens involved.

After studying this program and discussing it at length with Brooks, the plaintiffs decided to undertake it. A number of fanners agreed to participate, some of whom were accepted by the Finance Company and some were turned down. Notes and mortgages as previously outlined were prepared for those ac *232 cepted; however, Brooks insisted .that plaintiffs sign the notes and mortgages as well as the assignment and endorsement of them to the Finance Company. All of those contracts have now been paid out.

In early March 1963, Brooks advised Hooks, one of the plaintiffs, that the contracts of J. L. Cowart and E. L. Campbell had been approved and asked Hooks to sign their chattel mortgages and notes, although they had not been filled out. Hooks, having confidence in Brooks and expecting him to fill out and process these as before, signed the blank chattel mortgages and notes and turned them over to Brooks for him to complete as he had the previous ones. Soon afterward the chickens were delivered to Cowart and Campbell and the plaintiff company began furnishing feed as they had in other contracts.

In June 1963, Hooks told Brooks that the plaintiffs needed additional financing. A few days later Brooks reported to Hooks that the Finance Company had approved additional financing on the Cowart and Campbell contracts and again asked Hooks to sign blank mortgages and notes, stating that he would get them finished and turn them in to the Finance Company. Several days later plaintiffs received specified amounts on the Cowart and the Campbell chickens, and plaintiffs assumed that Brooks had processed these mortgages and notes as he had indicated and that Cowart and Campbell had signed as principals.

In late July 1963, plaintiff company received a notice from the Finance Company outlining payments due on the Cowart and Campbell contracts and noticed that the farmer listed was the plaintiff company and the dealer was the Grain Company. This was the plaintiffs’ first indication of trouble with the Cowart and Campbell contracts. Hooks immediately contacted Brooks and called this situation to his attention. Brooks stated that there was nothing to worry about, that it was merely some sort of mixup in the Finance Company’s office and he would see that it' was straightened out.

In August the Cowart and Campbell chickens went into production and the plaintiffs began making the payments called for under the contracts.

In early 1964 the plaintiff company found for the first time *233 that the chattel mortgages and notes on the Cowart and Campbell contracts had been made out by Brooks from the plaintiff company to the Grain Company, and had been transferred by the latter to the Finance Company. Plaintiffs later learned that the invoices for the chickens had been altered by Brooks to show that the plaintiff company had purchased the chickens and that its name had been forged on the invoices showing their delivery. Brooks admitted these alterations and forgeries.

As soon as the plaintiff company learned of this situation, the Finance Company’s credit manager, Hooks and Brooks went to the Cowart farm to discuss this situation with him. There, Cowart’s father stated that after Hooks’ and Brooks’ original talk with Cowart, Brooks had returned alone; that on such later occasion Brooks told Cowart that “they” were now in position to offer another program whereby the farmer would receive 20% of the egg proceeds for caring for the chickens and collecting and processing the eggs; that the farmer would not be liable in any way for the chickens or the feed therefor; and that this was the understanding that Cowart had with Brooks as to his contract.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.E.2d 96, 221 Ga. 229, 1965 Ga. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-hooks-ga-1965.