Brooks v. Todd
This text of 4 S.E. 156 (Brooks v. Todd) 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.
Opinion
Mrs. Mary A. Tuggle and Mrs. M. E. Awtry were joint owners of a certain tract of land in Hall county. Mrs. Tuggle filed a bill against Mrs. Awtry and others for partition. The court below appointed a receiver. He sold [694]*694the land and brought the fund into court. It was conceded by all parties that Mrs. Tuggle was entitled to half of the net fund in the hands of the receiver, and the court ordered it paid over to her accordingly. The contest, arose over the disposition of the fund belonging to Mrs. Awtry. She made no claim to the fund herself, but the contest was between William H. Todd and Lemuel Brooks, two parties who are defendants to said bill, and both creditors of Mrs. Awtry, who were called upon by the pleadings in the case to interplead and set out their respective claims to the fund belonging to Mrs. Awtry.
Each of said parties claimed the fund to the exclusion of the other. Lemuel Brooks claimed under a deed given to him by Mrs. Awtry to a half interest in the land to secure a debt. Todd claimed under a mortgage given him by Mrs. Awtry on the same interest in the land. The debts of Todd and Brooks were usurious. Todd claimed that Brooks’ deed, being tainted with usury, was void, and therefore he could not be entitled to participate in the fund. Brooks contended that the plea of usury was a personal one to Mrs. Awtry, and that, as Mrs. Awtry had not pleaded usury, Todd could not plead it for her; Brooks also contended that Mrs. Awtry, in giving Todd his mortgage, contracted with Todd that he was to receive it as a “ second mortgage to the claim of Lemuel Brooks, or at least subject to his rights and claims.”
The case was tried before the judge without the intervention of a jury, and he held that Brooks’s deed, being tainted with usury, was void, and ordered the money paid to Todd. Brooks excepted, and assigns error thereon.
Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
4 S.E. 156, 79 Ga. 692, 1887 Ga. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-todd-ga-1887.