Great Southern Accident & Fidelity Co. v. Guthrie

79 S.E. 162, 13 Ga. App. 288, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 25, 1913
Docket4909
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 162 (Great Southern Accident & Fidelity Co. v. Guthrie) 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
Great Southern Accident & Fidelity Co. v. Guthrie, 79 S.E. 162, 13 Ga. App. 288, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 128 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Pottle, J.

This was an action in assumpsit for money had and received, brought against the Great Southern Accident & Fidelity Company, a corporation, and R. H. Cantrell, W. G. Chipley, and Lockridge & Tanner, a firm composed of J. D. Lockridge and E. L. Tanner. The corporation was alleged to have an agency and place of business in Berrien county, where the suit was brought; Cantrell and Chipley were alleged to be residents of Fulton county, and Lockridge and Tanner to be residents of Coffee county. Neither [289]*289Cantrell nor Chipley was served or filed a defense. The other defendants pleaded to the merits, without demurring or objecting to the jurisdiction of the court. A verdict was directed against the corporation and in favor of Lockridge & Tanner. The corporation excepted to the direction of a verdict against it, and complains also of numerous rulings upon the admission of evidence.

1. A motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, upon' the ground that the only remedy of the losing party was a motion for a new trial, and a direct bill of exceptions would not lie. This point of practice has been settled against the defendant in error. Haskins v. Throne, 101 Ga. 126 (28 S. E. 611).

2. It is also suggested that we ought not to review the evidence, because the brief thereof set out in the bill of exceptions is not a compliance with the rule of practice as announced in previous decisions of this court. As to this point it is sufficient to say that while the brief is not as succinct a compendium of the material facts as might have been prepared, it does not show such a flagrant disregard of the rule of practice as to justify the conclusion that the plaintiff in error has made no bona fide attempt to brief the evidence.

3. Cantrell and Chipley organized the defendant corporation and acted as its fiscal agents in disposing of its stock. In pursuance of the plan agreed on, these agents subscribed for all of the stock except five shares, but this was done to facilitate the sale, and they were not expected to pay for the stock until they sold it. They were authorized to sell only for cash or its equivalent, which was understood to be a time interest-bearing certificate in some solvent bank, or New York exchange. The fiscal agents were to pay for the stock as sold, at $110 per share. The selling price was $200 per share. The plaintiff subscribed for five shares through Lockridge & Tanner, who were representing Cantrell and Chipley in making the sale, and gave his note for $1,000, payable to Lockridge & Tanner. The certificate of stock was issued and attached to the note, which was forwarded to a bank for collection. The note was not paid at maturity, and it and the stock were returned to the company. Thereupon the stock was cancelled and the note returned to Lockridge & Tanner. Subsequently the plaintiff paid the amount to Lockridge & Tanner. After deducting the amount to which they were entitled under their contract for making the sale, the [290]*290balance was forwarded to Cantrell and Chipley. None of the money was paid to the corporation, Cantrell and Chipley claiming that the company owed them more on other transactions than the sum which came into their hands from the plaintiff’s subscription. The company refused to reissue the stock, upon the ground that it had not been paid therefor, and the plaintiff contends that the corporation and Lockridge & Tanner are indebted to him jointly in the amount paid for the stock.

An action for money had and received lies against one who holds the money of another which he ought in equity and good conscience to refund. Where more than one person is sued, a joint recovery of the whole amount against all will not be authorized, unless it appears that all received the money jointly. If it was not so received, the plaintiff can only recover from each defendant separately the amount shown to have come into his hands. In such an action, where the tort is waived, conspiracy and fraud may be proved merely for the purpose of showing that those who received the money are not entitled to keep it, and not for the purpose of recovering from one of the conspirators the whole amount received by all, unless it actually came into his hands. All this is settled by the Supreme Court in Cowart v. Fender, 137 Ga. 586 (73 S. E. 822, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 932), where the nature of the action is discussed and the distinction between it and an action sounding in tort is shown.

4. Presumptively an agent to sell can sell only for cash. 31 Cyc. 1357. The authority of Cantrell and Chipley as agents for the corporation was limited to a sale of the stock for cash, or its equivalent, as explained in the evidence. Hence the title to the stock did not pass into the plaintiff upon the execution of the note. This is true without reference to whether the plaintiff had knowledge of the terms of the contract between the corporation and its agents.

5. 'It is contended that when the plaintiff did not pay his note at maturity and the company cancelled the stock and returned the note, the transaction was ended so far as the company was concerned, and the subsequent payment of the money by the plaintiff did not bind the company to issue the stock or render it liable to return the money received by its agents. Cantrell and Chipley were, under the evidence, general agents of the company,, to dispose of stock in its behalf. The only limitation upon their authority [291]*291was that the sale should be for cash. If, after the cancellation of the stock, the company had returned to the plaintiff his note and notified him that the sale of stock had been cancelled and the agency of Cantrell and Chipley revoked, a different question would arise. The plaintiff’s subscription was still outstanding. Certainly, in the absence of notice to the contrary, he had the right to assume that he was being held liable on his subscription and the note given therefqr, and had the right, upon payment of his note, to demand the issuance of the stock. The agency of Cantrell and Chipley to sell the stock had not been revoked, and even if it had, the plaintiff had no notice of it. He had, therefore, the right to continue to treat these parties as the duly authorized agents of the company to receive the money. Whatever money Cantrell and Chipley received as agents for the company is deemed in law to have been received by the corporation itself, and, as to the amount so received, the plaintiff was clearly entitled to recover against the corporation.

The evidence discloses, however, that Cantrell and Chipley did not receive the whole amount paid by the plaintiff to Lockridge & Tanner, but that some amount, not disclosed by the evidence, was deducted by these parties and the balance paid over to Cantrell and Chipley. If Lockridge & Tanner were also the agents of the corporation, this would make no difference, but if they were merely the agents of Cantrell and Chipley, the company would not be bound to refund to the plaintiff the money which they received but did not pay over to any agent of the corporation authorized to receive it. We find no evidence which would have authorized, certainly none which required, a finding that Lockridge & Tanner were agents of the corporation. They so describe themselves, but their conclusion is not supported by the evidence. They were employed by Cantrell and Chipley to sell stock for them.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 162, 13 Ga. App. 288, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-southern-accident-fidelity-co-v-guthrie-gactapp-1913.