Kennedy v. Davis
This text of 8 S.E. 52 (Kennedy v. Davis) 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
Kennedy & Blun sought to foreclose a mortgage given them by Davis & Scott upon certain realty. Davis & Scott filed three pleas : (1) the general issue, (2) recoupment, (3) payment. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs made a motion for a new [211]*211trial, -which, was overruled, and they excepted. The main issue on the trial in the court below seemed to have been on the third plea, in which Davis & Scott alleged that the mortgage was paid off, by reason of the fact that when they shipped turpentine and rosin to the plaintiffs, they gave them instructions to appropriate the proceeds of the same to the payment of the mortgage. This was testified to positively by one of the defendants and he also testified that his firm had drawn several drafts upon the plaintiffs, and that he expected the plaintiffs to use the proceeds of the goods sent in payment of these drafts, but thought the proceeds of the goods would be sufficient to pay off the draft and the mortgage. In this it appears • he was mistaken. It also appears from the testimony that when this settlement was had between Davis, one of the defendants, and Blun, one of the plaintiffs, Davis insisted on Blun’s surrendering the mortgage, which Blun refused to do; whereupon Davis declined to proceed with the settlement until he could see a lawyer. Having seen the lawyer, he completed the settlement by giving new notes, and Blun kept the mortgageand this was the mortgage sought to be foreclosed.
In addition to this, the evidence shows that the plaintiffs sent the defendants, duz’ing the yeaz’, three accounts of sales, which accounts of sales informed the defendants of the disposition made of the proceeds of the sale of the goods. The record does not show that the defendants objected to the disposition thus made of the pz’oceeds of the goods, although they were requested in each one of the accouzzts of sales to examine them and report any errors therein. But it is argued also by couzisel for the defendants in error that, pending the settlement between these parties, Blun, ozze of the plaintiffs, admitted that this mortgage had been paid off, and it is claimed that this will authoz’ize the finding of the jury. Blun denies this; but outside of his denial, we think the testimony of Davis, the defendant, on this poizit, would not authorize the finding of the juzy. "While Davis testifies that Blun made this adznission, he also testifies that he demazided the moz’tgage from Blun, and that Blun refused to surrender it; that he (Davis) refused to complete the settlemeizt unless, it was surrendered, and that after seeing a lawyer about it, he allowed Blun to keep the znortgage for the purpose, as he says, of protecting Blun agaizist judgments which had been rendered against him and Scott. It also appears that, at the time of the settlement, the amount due Kennedy & Blun was $1,991.36, that a note and a zzew moz’tgage were given by Davis & Scott for $791.36, the excess over the $1,200 secured by the fiz’st mortgage, and that Davis took it home with him and he and Scott executed it. This shows that Blun did zzot consider the first znortgage paid off, and his reason for refusing to surrender it. If it was paid off) what se[213]*213curity would Blun have had for the $1,200 originally advanced? We think these facts go to sustain the denial of Blun. If the mortgage had been paid off as claimed by Davis, be should have insisted on its surrender, and not left it in tbe bands of tbe plaintiff for any purpose, or for tbe purpose of getting rid of Blun, as be says further on in bis testimony.
Judgment reversed.
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8 S.E. 52, 82 Ga. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-davis-ga-1888.