Clarke v. Havard

51 L.R.A. 499, 36 S.E. 837, 111 Ga. 242, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 11, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 51 L.R.A. 499 (Clarke v. Havard) 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
Clarke v. Havard, 51 L.R.A. 499, 36 S.E. 837, 111 Ga. 242, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 523 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Lumpkin, P. J.

This case turns upon the questions dealt with below. It is an action upon a promissory.note for the-principal sum of $750, and three coupon interest notes thereto attached. The main note is dated January 1, 1896, and due January 1, 1901, with interest from date at 7 per cent, per annum, evidenced by ten coupon notes, including those sued upon, which were on their face overdue when the action was-brought. The large note is payable to the order of the Security Investment Company of Bridgeport, Conn., and stipulates that,, if default should be made in the payment of interest, it shall, at the holder’s option, become due and payable regardless of the-date of maturity. The smaller notes are payable to the Invest[245]*245ment Company or bearer, and stipulate for interest after their maturity at 8 per cent, per annum. The plaintiff’s petition contains an allegation that all of these notes were, directly after their execution, duly assigned to her. This allegation is not denied in the answer, but the defendant therein alleges that “the contract, as made by her, was that she was to borrow of the payee of said notes the sum of $655,” that this was the amount actually loaned to her, and that “she does not owe the amount claimed in said suit as principal, because there' is charged as part of said principal the'sum of ninety-five dollars, the same being charged against this defendant as commissions by officers and agents of the payee of said notes, and the same is illegal, being charged under the name of commissions to avoid the laws against usury.” The answer further states that the amount of the usury is $89.95, and sets forth in detail the facts and figures upon which this assertion is based. ' It seems to'have been properly conceded that the defense of usury, if well founded in fact, was good against the plaintiff, though she became a bona fide holder for value before the maturity of the notes. See Angier v. Smith, 101 Ga. 844. At the conclusion of the evidence on both sides, the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the principal and interest claimed in the petition, and the defendant excepted. The evidence is set forth in the report preceding this opinion.

1. The first question for determination is, did the evidence warrant a finding that Barnett was the agent of the Investment Company to make the loan? We think it did. The loan was certainly made for and in behalf of that company. Of neces-' sity it had to be represented in the transaction by some one acting as its agent. It could not possibly make a loan in any other way. There is no evidence tending to show that it was in fact represented by any one other than the Georgia Loan & Trust Company or Barnett. He and the Georgia Company were acting in concert. He testified that it did not loan the money, and that the Investment Company did. But how? On this particular point his testimony is not lucid, but the real meaning of it, when taken in connection with other things stated by him, is not difficult of ascertainment. He said : “The Georgia Loan & Trust Co. got thirty dollars of the commission [246]*246I charged. They and I are brokers, and do not act as agents of any lenders. We obtain money from different capitalists at different times. The interest paid on the note was sent to the .Georgia Loan & Trust Co., at Macon, Georgia, as a matter of convenience, and is not a payment until it reaches the lender.” He further testified that the defendant employed him to obtain the loan; that he represented the borrower; that he was not the agent of the lender, and did not act as such. As will have been observed, the written application signed by the defendant and purporting to constitute Barnett her agent to procure the loan was dated January 18, though apparently the note was executed on January 1. Barnett stated facts and conclusions therefrom. The conclusions, however, were merely his own. Are they necessarily correct and, as such, binding and conclusive upon the defendant? Would not these facts and the other facts in the case warrant other and very different conclusions? He obtained money from the Investment Company to lend out. For whom? Why, for the company, of course. At the time he received this money the defendant had not asked for a loan. It was on hand when she called. Up to that point who, and who alone, was represented by Barnett? The answer is simple. Does it alter the actual facts of the transaction that the borrower signed a paper, bearing a date seventeen days later than that of the note, stating that Barnett was thereby made her agent to borrow $750? Doubtless this discrepancy in dates is susceptible of explanation. Indeed, the defendant’s receipt to Barnett for the money borrowed was 'dated January 20. But what difference would it make that the note was dated back, which must have been the case if we accept as true the statement of the witness T. A. Clarke, that “the note and papers were signed at the same time the money was paid” ? Could not the jury have found, and ought they not, in view of all the evidence, to have found, that the contract embraced in the application was purely colorable? The law cares nothing about the form of a transaction, but characterizes it according to its substance and results. What is the substance of this transaction? Manda A. Clarke, wishing to borrow money, applied to Barnett for a loan, supposing she was dealing exclusively with him. He had on hand money [247]*247which had been sent to him by the Investment Company through the Georgia Cpmpany, his coagent, to be loaned. He let the applicant have the money, taking her note payable to the Investment Company, after deducting $95 for commissions. The Georgia Company collected what was paid on the interest, notes and forwarded the same to the owner. Against all this there is nothing to show agency for the borrower, except Bar? nett’s statement of a mere conclusion, backed by the seemingly belated application for the loan. Certainly it would not have required a strain to find that the loan was made by Barnett as agent of the Investment Company. What service did he render the defendant as her agent which was not directly connected with that he performed in behalf of the Investment Company, agreeably to his undertaking to effect for it a loan of money which it had previously sent to him for that purpose? How, under the circumstances, could it have been possible for him to do anything in her behalf in procuring the loan? He did not ask the Investment Company to make a loan to the defendant. All he had to do when she applied to him for the money was to let her have it. This-he did, and in so doing rendered her no more service, save as to examining her titles, than every lender does when he loans money to a borrower on application. There is no question here as to Barnett’s right to make a charge for examining the titles.

This case is obviously different upon its facts from that of Merck v. Mortgage Co., 79 Ga. 213, and numerous others of its class, in which the lender received the borrower’s application, passed upon it for himself, and for himself decided whether or not the security was good and the terms offered satisfactory. Here, Barnett passed upon these and all kindred questions for the lender, manifestly with authority so to do, which was either general or limited by instructions not disclosed. If this does not amount to agency, we have no conception of what agency is.

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Bluebook (online)
51 L.R.A. 499, 36 S.E. 837, 111 Ga. 242, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-havard-ga-1900.