Gramling, Spalding & Co. v. Pool

36 S.E. 430, 111 Ga. 93, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 488
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 7, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 36 S.E. 430 (Gramling, Spalding & Co. v. Pool) 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
Gramling, Spalding & Co. v. Pool, 36 S.E. 430, 111 Ga. 93, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 488 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Lewis, J.

It appears that the litigation between the parties-to this case has been pending in court for a number of years. The plaintiffs in this case filed their bill in December, 1885,, as creditors by open account of the firm of Turner & Hudson, against said firm, which was composed of G. R. Turner and Allen Hudson, and also against W. H. Pool and others, for injunction, receiver, and other equitable relief. That bill, among other things, alleged that Turner and Hudson were insolvent traders, and attacked as fraudulent and void a deed from G. R. Turner to W. H. Pool, dated March 19, 1884. That case,came to this court, and is reported as Pool v. Gramling, 88 Ga. 653. It seems from that case it was decided that the deed from Turner to W. H. Pool was executed and held for the purpose [94]*94of delaying and defeating the collection of debts due by Turner & Hudson to complainants’and other creditors; that Pool held an absolute deed to the property to secure a debt, with his bond to reconvey outstanding; that upon the debtor after-wards becoming insolvent, Pool took the property in payment of the debt, the value of the property being largely in excess of the debt. On this branch of the case it was decided by this court that the other creditors might have the property administered in equity as the assets of an insolvent, and the proceeds applied first to the secured debt, and the surplus to their own claims. The present case is an ancillary proceeding brought to the May adjourned term, 1896, of court, by the same plaintiffs against the defendants, Turner & Hudson, W. H. Pool, et ah, in which it is alleged that the property described in the original bill in the case had been sold under the decree rendered therein by the commissioner appointed by the court for that purpose, and brought the sum of $2,100, the terms of sale being one third cash, and the balance in one and two years, payments drawing 8 % interest per annum from date; that the commissioner had collected the cash payment of $700.00, and had instituted suit on the notes given by Mrs. Mary W. Turner for the balance due in one and two years after date; that before the final trial of the case in the Supreme Court Pool had charge of the premises sold as set out in the original suit, and received more rents and profits arising from said property than his entire debt against Turner & Hudson amounted to, and that he should pay back to complainants the sum of $800.00 for rent on said property, which he received over and above the amount of the debt claimed by him against G. R. Turner. The petition prayed that the matters therein referred to be inquired of by the court, and a final distribution of the money be had in the case as originally directed in the decree, and that said Pool be required to account for all moneys and rents which had gone into his hands. Petitioners amended by alleging that G. R. Turner gave to Pool his note for $50.00 as interest on $600.00 for eight months from date, and that in the fall of 1885 Turner paid off the $50.00 note, which was $16.00 more than eight per cent, per annum on the amount borrowed. This balance was claimed as a set-off against the principal sum of $600.00. [95]*95The jury on the trial of the issue formed by this ease returned a verdict in favor of W. H. Pool for $729.78; whereupon plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial, and except to the judgment of the court overruling the same. In the judgment overruling this motion it was ordered by the court that counsel for Pool write off of said verdict and judgment the sum of $65.80, in obedience to which order that amount was written off.

1. In one ground of the motion for a new trial it is alleged that the court erred in refusing to charge the jury, as duly requested by plaintiff’s counsel in writing, as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that G. R. Turner, on the 21st day of March, 1884, borrowed from W. H. Pool the sum of $600.00, and gave to Pool his note for $50.00 as interest on same date, and that this note was given as interest on $600.00 for eight months’ time, beginning on the 21st of March and due 21st of November, 1884, and you further believe that Turner paid the $50.00 in fall of 1885, and took up the note, I charge you that all over eight per cent, on the $600.00 for eight months would be usury, and you ought to credit Pool’s debt with such usury at the time it was paid in 1885.” Exception is further taken in the motion to the following charge of the court: “I will state here that the $50.00 note has nothing to do with the case. That has already been paid, settled and gone into, and you need not consider it in any way.” There seems to be no dispute ip the testimony introduced on the trial that Pool actually made a loan of $600.00 to Turner, and that he took his note for $600.00 principal, and also took another note for $50.00 due in six months, which was stated by Turner to be a premium for the loan of $600.00. There is no question that the $50.00 note was really usurious, and that as such it was paid in the fall of 1885, several years before the institution of this proceeding to make the creditor account for the usury. It does not appear that when Turner paid the $50.00 note he was insolvent. Hence we think the claim of forfeiture of this usury has long since been barred by the statute of limitations. By the act of February 24,1875 (Actsof 1875, p. 105), entitled “An act to regulate and restrict the rate of interest in this State, and for other purposes therein mentioned,” after providing that it should be unlawful to charge or take any interest greater than 12% per annum, and any one vio[96]*96lating this provision should forfeit the interest so charged or taken, it was provided further, “That any plea or suit for the recovery of such forfeiture shall not be barred by the lapse of time shorter than one year.” The act approved December 11, 1871 (Acts of 1871, p. 75), made the period of limitation for a forfeiture of usury charged six months; and the act of 1875, which is embodied in the Civil Code, § 2891, simply intended to extend the period of limitation prescribed by the act of 1871 from six to twelve months. In'the case of Cheapstead v. Frank, 71 Ga. 549, it was decided that the statute of limitations in reference to any pleas or suits for the recovery of usury paid is applicable to suits to recover usury which has been paid, or to a set-off claiming such a demand. This decision had reference to the act of 1875, above cited. In the case of Lilly v. DeLaperiere, 76 Ga. 348, there seems to have been a question on the mind of Justice Blandford as to whether this act of 1875 was repealed by the act of October 14, 1879. Acts of 1879, p. 184. This question was finally adjudicated by this court in Johnson v. Southern Asso., 97 Ga. 622, which held that “Section five of the usury act of February 24,1875 (Acts of 1875, p. 105), now embodied in section 2057 (e) of the Code [of 1882], was not repealed by the usury act of October 14, 1879 (Acts of 1878-1879, p. 185), and consequently an action for the recovery of money paid as usury must be brought within one year from the time such paj^ment was made, or the same will be barred.” Besides, section 2057 (e) of the Code of 1882, construed by that decision, is now embodied in the present code, and would stand as law, even if there had been an effort to repeal the same by the legislature of 1879.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.E. 430, 111 Ga. 93, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gramling-spalding-co-v-pool-ga-1900.