First National Bank v. Atlanta Rubber Co.
This text of 77 Ga. 781 (First National Bank v. Atlanta Rubber Co.) 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
The Willow Brook Manufacturing Company, of North Carolina, being indebted to the Atlanta Rubber Company less than three hundred dollars, the latter company sued out an attachment against the former company and caused’ certain insurance companies to be garnished. The Winston National Bank dissolved these garnishments by interposing a claim in accordance with the statute. Upon the trial of the claim case, it was contended, on the part of claimant, that the policies of insurance had been transferred and assigned to the bank after the loss and before [785]*785the garnishments had been served on the insurance companies by the manufacturing company, to pay an indebtedness which the Willow Brook Company owed the bank. The Rubber company insisted that the assignment of these policies was void, because the same was made to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of the Willow Brook Company. On the trial, the testimony of the cashier of the bank, taken by commission, was read, and in answer to the question of the plaintiff as to the indebtedness of the Willow Brook Company to the bank, he stated that the Willow Brook Manufacturing Company and one Causey, who was its superintendent, were indebted about twenty thousand dollars; and in answer to the interrogatory as to how much the bank had received from the insurance companies, he stated that the bank had collected the whole loss, as shown by the adjustments and the bank’s receipts upon the policies. The evidence of the adjuster showed that the adjustment of loss among the several companies amounted to twenty thousand three hundred and nine dollars. The court, among other things, charged the jury upon the law as to fraudulent assignments. To the charge the plaintiff in error excepted, and assigns the charge as error, not because the same is not correct as applied to the law of the subject, but because there was no evidence which authorized a charge on this subject, and that the charge is merely abstract.
j udgment affirmed.;
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77 Ga. 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-atlanta-rubber-co-ga-1886.