Ewing v. Mechanics Loan & Savings Co.

7 S.E.2d 583, 61 Ga. App. 808
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 1, 1940
Docket27910, 27923.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 583 (Ewing v. Mechanics Loan & Savings Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewing v. Mechanics Loan & Savings Co., 7 S.E.2d 583, 61 Ga. App. 808 (Ga. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

Sutton, J.

Mechanics Loan and Savings Company brought suit in the municipal court of Atlanta, now the civil court of Fulton County, against Herman Alonzo Ewing, Elmo Bell, John K. Castleberry, William Walter Fain, Plennie C. McConnell, and Herbert H. Ewing. Proper service was effected on all but Herman Alonzo Ewing and John K. Castleberry. The petition alleged, that the defendants were indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $928, besides interest and twenty per cent, attorney’s fees, upon a guarantjr, a copy of which was attached to the petition as exhibit A and made a part thereof; that the guaranty sued on was given by the defendants to guarantee the payment of a- certain note in the sum of $1392, dated October 26, 1937, and signed by H. A. Ewing, the note being shown by copy on the reverse side of exhibit A and marked exhibit B and made a part of the petition; that more than ten days before the filing of the suit the defendants were given notice, as per copy attached and marked exhibit C, that suit would be filed and attorney’s fees claimed. Exhibit B purports to be a copy of a note signed by H. A. Ewing in favor of Mechanics Loan & Savings Company in the sum of $1392, dated October 26, 1937, “with interest from date of issue of certificate at eight per cent. (8%) per annum, and all costs, including twenty per cent. (20%) attorney’s fees, if collected by law, or through an attorney, said attorney’s fees not to be less than a minimum of $10.” The paper is headed “Purchase-money note for four per cent. (4%) installment certificate,” and among other things the note provides:

“This note is payable . . in 24 installments of $58 each on the 22 day of each and every month following the date hereof, until the whole amount of this note, together with interest accruing thereon, shall have been fully paid, being for the purchase of. a four per cent. (4%) installment certificate of Mechanics Loan & Savings Company. Failure to pay any installment of this note, as herein provided, time being made expressly of the essence, shall render at the option of the holder thereof, with or without notice, all remaining installments at once due and collectible. There has been deposited and pledged as collateral security for the payment *810 of this note, or any other liability or liabilities of the' undersigned to the owner thereof, whether the same be now existing or hereafter contracted, now due, or hereafter to become due, the following property, to wit: B/S. Said company is authorized to take additional security, as collateral security for the payment of this note; and to substitute other collateral in lieu thereof, and/or to release any collateral to the maker hereof. Said company shall not be required to first proceed against any of its collateral, or other security, before filing suit and obtaining judgment thereon. It may, at its option, refuse to take legal or other proceedings to foreclose on its collateral or other security, and may file suit, without doing so, against the parties hereto, and may at its election require the discharge of any obligation herein by any of the undersigned. If at any time-the collateral above or hereafter pledged as security for this note shall be or become unsatisfactory to the holder hereof, the undersigned will immediately furnish such further security or make such payments on account as will be satisfactory to the holder; and in the case of a failure so to do, or if the undersigned shall fail to meet at maturity any liability to holder hereof, then and in either of these events the holder of this note shall have the option to treat the same as due and payable, and without demand for payment or notice to the undersigned may exercise all rights given hereunder or by law upon a default. . . Failure of the holder hereof to exercise any rights it may have, or may acquire with respect to this note, shall never be claimed by the undersigned, nor held by any court, to constitute a waiver by the holder hereof to such rights. . . The nominal interest of $78 shall be payable at the rate of $3.25 each per month, with each installment of principal, making the total amount thereof $61.25 each per month, on each due date until any default, in which .event all accrued interest to such date, less any credits, shall be paid, and interest at 8% per annum on balance of principal thenceforth until fully paid.” On the back of the note, as shown by exhibit A, appears the following, followed by the signature of the defendants': “For and in consideration of the Mechanics Loan & Savings Company accepting the within note, the undersigned hereby jointly, severally, and in solido guarantee- the Mechanics Loan & Savings Company, its successors, indorsers, or assigns, the punctual payment of all the intallments of-the within note and the fulfillment *811 of each and every term and condition contained therein. If this guarantee is collected by law or through an attorney at law, then the undersigned hereby agrees to pay 20 per cent, attorney’s fees, with a minimum attorney fee of $10. The undersigned hereby consent that the time of payment of said note may be extended any 'number of times, and/or smaller payments than provided therein accepted, without further notice to or further assent of the undersigned, or any of them, and that each and every one of them shall remain bound by this agreement, notwithstanding. Each of us, whether principal, surety, guarantor, endorser, or otherwise party hereto, hereby severally waives and renounces, each for himself and family [any and all homestead or exemption rights], and each further waives demand, protest, and notice of demand, protest, and nonpayment.”

The defendants filed general demurrers, which were overruled, and in their bill of exceptions error was assigned on exceptions pendente lite duly certified and filed, but in their brief counsel for defendants, plaintiffs in error in this court, do not argue or insist upon but expressly abandon this assignment of error. The defendants filed an answer denying liability and set' up that they had been induced to sign the guarantee upon the representation that certain collateral had been taken by the plaintiff which fully and adequately protected the obligation, but that the plaintiff never took possession, custody, or control of such collateral (an automobile, household and kitchen furniture, and a certain life-insurance policy on the life-of the principal), but allowed the same to be consumed by the maker of the note; that the 4 per cent, installment certificate, for which the note was purportedly given, had never been delivered unconditionally to the principal debtor, and that there had been no bona fide sale of such certificate, and that the transaction was merely a device and scheme to avoid the laws against usury and to work a fraud upon the defendants; that they had not received any consideration for their guarantee and that the note itself was infected with usury. Subsequently the defendants, over the demurrers and objections of the plaintiff, filed an amendment, reciting that the transaction between H. A. Ewing and the plaintiff was one in which he borrowed the sum of $1200 to pay debts owing by him to third parties, that the purchase of the certificate was not a bona fide transaction, that the relation *812

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 583, 61 Ga. App. 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-mechanics-loan-savings-co-gactapp-1940.