Lee v. Baldwin
This text of 10 Ga. 208 (Lee v. Baldwin) 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
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The rule applicable to such cases, was stated by this Court in Eastman vs. McAlpin, 1 Kelly, 170. In that case it was held, that the answer of the defendant is evidence for him so far as it is responsive to the call of the bill for discovery, or connected necessarily with the responsive matter, or explanatory of it. Let us now test the defendant’s answer by that rule, who is called on to discover the contract under which the note was received, and the purpose for which it was received. Inasmuch as the receipt taken at the time, therefore, is lost, the defendant answering says, that he (complainant) “ left with this defendant the said note of six hundred dollars, on his brother John W. Lee, as collateral security, stating that the note was perfectly good, and that he did not wish this defendant to do anything with the said note of six hundred dollars, until he returned home, but just to keep and to hold it for his protection, and that he should return in a month or two.”
This part of the defendant’s answer is most clearly responsive to the charge in complainant’s bill, in relation to the reception of the six hundred dollar note, and states the contract under which it was received, and is, therefore, evidence for the defendant, as to the terms upon which the note was received by him from the [213]*213complainant. The defendant further answered, in addition to' the fact that the complainant stated he should return in a month or two, “ which, however, turned out not to be true, so far as his return was concerned, as the said complainant did not return, nor did this defendant find out where he was, or what had become of him, until about twelve months afterwards, and then learned that he had returned to, and was living in Columbus, and did not return to Macon, the place of his former residence, as was expected.” The Court below held, that this latter part of the defendant’s answer was responsive, and also evidence for the defendant, and so instructed the Jury.
This latter part of defendant’s answer in regard to the return of the complainant, and in regard to his knowledge of his residence, was not, in our judgment, evidence for the defendant, because, not responsive to any allegation made in the bill. There is no allegation as to the return of the complainant, or as to his place of residence, when he did return.
The Court stated the general rule to be, that where a party received a note as collateral security for a debt, without any special agreement, the party receiving the note should use ordinary care and diligence in collecting it, and if any loss should happen to the other party by reason of a want of such care and diligence, the law would compel him to make good the loss. Lawrence vs. McCalmont et al. 2 Howard’s U. S. Rep. 427. The Court then submitted the question to the Jury, as to whether there was a special agreement made between the parties in this case, which would take it out of the general rule, and what was the term of that special agreement, and held that the parties must be bound by that agreement.
[214]*214
Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.
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10 Ga. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-baldwin-ga-1851.