Haug v. Riley

29 S.E. 44, 101 Ga. 372, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 10, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 44 (Haug v. Riley) 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
Haug v. Riley, 29 S.E. 44, 101 Ga. 372, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 236 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Lumpkin, P. J.

Suit was brought in the court below against Robert Whitfield and F. Haug upon a promissory note signed by them as joint makers. The court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and Haug brings the case here for review. As his codefendant filed no defense to the action, and is not a party to the present writ of error, we shall, for convenience, deal with the case as though the plaintiff in error was the only party defendant in the lower court.

1. Complaint is made that the court, over the defendant’s objection, allowed the plaintiff “to establish a copy of the note sued, in lieu of the alleged lost original, by oral testimony, . . said original note not being, .or having ever been, an office paper, and the note so allowed to be established showing only one credit of $60.00, while the allegations in the declaration admitted and allowed four credits amounting to $140.00.” As to the first ground of objection urged, the law in this State is well settled. “A party is not obliged to establish a lost paper under the judiciary act, but may, by showing its loss or destruction, as in this case, give in secondary evidence of its contents, and, upon sufficient proof, recover on it as a lost or destroyed paper.” Lindsay v. Kendrick & Co., 30 Ga. 546, citing Ross & Co. v. Wright, 12 Ga. 509. “A lost note may be sued upon without taking steps to establish a copy; the Code, §3986 [Civil Code, §4750], being permissive or cumulative, [374]*374not mandatory or exclusive. 42 Ga. 462. The loss of the note while suit upon it was pending did not render the establishment of a copy indispensable in order for the suit to proceed.” Jernigan v. Carter, 60 Ga. 133. “The genuineness of the original, and the correctness” of a copy thereof attached as an exhibit to the plaintiff’s petition, “may be established by parol evidence.” Ibid. 131. And “on'proof of loss of the original agreement, and the correctness of a copy, the copy may go to the jury as evidence.” Goodman v. Henderson, 58 Ga. 567.

Nor is there any merit in the objection that the paper which the plaintiff was allowed to introduce in evidence, upon proof that it was a correct copy of the lost original, showed only one credit, whereas “the allegations in the declaration admitted and allowed four credits.” A plaintiff may very properly admit more payments than are actually entered upon the instrument on which he brings his action. This apparently is what-was done in the present case; for, although the exhibit attached to the plaintiff’s petition showed only one credit, it was nevertheless, according to the undisputed evidence, a true and correct copy of the lost original. This copy was simply used as evidence to show the basis of the plaintiff’s cause of action; and the amount claimed and recovered was, not that which on the face of the instrument purported to be due, but only that which was sued for.

2. As originally brought, this was a suit instituted by M. W. Hall, to whom the original note in question had been transferred by proper endorsement. He having died before the trial, the case was prosecuted by his administrator. It appears from the evidence that, prior to bringing his action, Hall had assigned this.note to Mrs. Brake as collateral security, the assignment being written on “a paper other than the note” itself; and that subsequently the note had been returned to him, he executing and delivering to Mrs. Brake a receipt in the following words: “ Received of M. L. Brake note signed by F. Haug and Robert Whitfield, for collection, said note being transferred by myself to said M. L. Brake to secure my note given said Brake for $320.00, and due May 1, 1892.” A motion was made in the court below to dismiss the plaintiff’s action, on the [375]*375ground “that the legal title to the alleged lost original note was in” Mrs. Brake “when said action was brought and filed”; and the overruling of this motion is here assigned as error.

As a matter of course, if it be true that the legal title to the note was not in Hall at the time he instituted his action, this would constitute an insuperable obstacle to the prosecution of his suit, and the defendant’s motion should have been sustained. For one who is a mere stranger to the legal title, albeit he may have possession of the instrument upon which suit is brought, can not maintain an action thereon against the maker. Dalton City Co. v. Johnson, 57 Ga. 398. In the present case, however, it unequivocally appeared that the instrument sued on was expressly made payable “to order,” and was regularly endorsed to Hall; so he certainly can not be regarded as a stranger to the note. On the contrary, so far as the instrument itself furnishes evidence as to its ownership, title thereto passed into Hall and remained in him as the last endorsee, no endorsement by him to Mrs. Brake, or to any one else, appearing either upon the back or upon the face of the note. It is claimed, nevertheless, that Mrs. Brake became the holder of the legal title by reason of the assignment to her above mentioned.

Tested by the familiar and universally recognized rules of the law merchant, this contention is not well founded. The note being payable “to order,” mere delivery of it to Mrs.; Brake certainly would not pass the legal title. Nor would a mere assignment thereof, evidenced by another and entirely distinct instrument in writing, have that effect. For “where a bill or note payable to order’ is transferred without endorsement, the transferee does not acquire the legal, hut only the equitable title. ” 1 Dan. Neg. In. § 741. Endorsement is the only method by which the legal title to such an. instrument can he transferred. Ibid. § 664 a. True, it may be transferred without endorsement; “but in such case the asr signment is not in the usual course of business, in accordance with mercantile custom, only the equitable title passing to the assignee.” Ibid. § 729. And to the same effect, see 4 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law (2d ed.), 255,257, citing numerous cases both English and American; Norton on Bills and Notes, 94, [376]*376155. “The endorsement must be written on the instrument transferred,”' — “must be somewhere on the instrument.” See. authorities, last cited. Of course, if necessary or convenient, another slip of paper, “ generally called by the French name allonge,” may be annexed to the instrument, on which subsequent endorsements may be written, which will have the same effect- as if written upon the instrument itself, such paper being deemed a part thereof. Ibid.; Wood’s By les on Bills and Notes, 152. But a written transfer upon another and entirely distinct instrument is not permissible, and will not have the effect of passing the legal title to a note or bill expressly made payable “to order.” French v. Turner, 15 Ind. 59; Doll v. Hollenbeck, 19 Neb. 639, 641. The fact that the maker expressly stipulates that he shall be called upon to pay none other than one to whom the instrument is transferred by regular endorsement, should answer as furnishing a sufficient reason upon which this rule may rest. Norton on Bills and Notes, 156. Another and equally important reason may, however, be given. It is indispensably necessary, if such instruments are to fulfil the object for which they were designed, that they should carry with them the indicia by which their ownership is to be determined; otherwise, their value as a circulating medium would be largely curtailed, if not entirely destroyed.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 44, 101 Ga. 372, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haug-v-riley-ga-1897.