Morris v. Marqueze & Varney

74 Ga. 86, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 21, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 Ga. 86 (Morris v. Marqueze & Varney) 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
Morris v. Marqueze & Varney, 74 Ga. 86, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 288 (Ga. 1885).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

Hook & Smith, a firm doing business in Atlanta, became indebted to plaintiffs, who were merchants in Boston, for goods which the plaintiffs had furnished them previous to the fall of 1881. In the latter part of October of that year, their agent became uneasy about their claim, and called several times at the store of Hook &; Smith to see after it, and also consulted an attorney in relation to its collection. Plook assured this agent, Grasty, that it was all right; that his firm was worth $10,000.00 or $12,000.00 above its liabilities, and he was going to get in a rich partner; but this did not satisfy the agent, who saw Hook again between the 1st and 5th of November, and urged him to pay the claim. Four-fifths of he stock of goods then in the store had been purchased from plaintiffs, who had written to their agent, if he thought the defendants unsafe, to stop the goods in transitu and this agent had’ determined to take steps in the matter unless Hook satisfied him. On this visit, he exhibited to the agent an agreement purporting to have been executed between Smith and the defendant, Morris, [88]*88on the first day of November, 1881, whereby it was witnessed that Smith had that day sold and conveyed to Morris his entire interest in the assets of Hook & Smith, consisting of their stock, all their notes, and other property, for the consideration of $3,000, one thousand dollars of which was paid in cash, and one thousand dollars was to be paid on the first of the following December, and the remaining thousand dollars on January 1st, 1882 Morris, in consideration of the assets conveyed to him, agreed to assume, with Hook, the debts of the firm of Hook & Smith, and to protect Smith from all responsibility for the same. This agreement was signed by Hook, .who was no party to it, and by Morris, but was never signed by Smith, who was the other party. Grasty, the agent, was so well satisfied with it that, without ever having seen Morris, and without looking further into the matter, he took the note signed by Hook, with the name of Hook & Morris, in settlement of the plaintiffs’ claim against Hook & Smith ■ This note, which is the foundation of the plaintiffs’-suit, was dated od the 8th day of October, 1881, nearly one month previous to the agreement alleged to have been entered into between the defendant,,Morris, and Smith. To explain this glaring discrepancy, Grasty swore that the note was given early in November, he thinks before the 5th of the month, and that the date was fixed to make it correspond with the average date of the shipments of goods which the plaintiffs had made to Hook & Smith, which shipments had commenced in September previous; that this mode of dating papers was in accordance with the custom of plaintiffs’ house. He shortly thereafter' placed the note, together with the invoice of the goods for which it was given, in the hands of an attorney for collection. It does not appear that the old firm of Hook & Smith was released from liability for this debt by the execution of this note. Hook made no defence to the suit, but Morris set up a defence, wherein he alleged that, at the date of the note, there was no such partnership as Hook & Morris; and that he [89]*89was not then in any way a partner of Hook; that the note was executed by Hook in the name of Hook & Morris in settlement of a debt due to plaintiffs from Hook & Smith, and upon no other consideration; that the settlement was a matter outside the partnership agreement of Hook & Morris, and that Hook, in executing the note, acted without the knowledge or consent or authority of him, Morris.

When the agreement purporting to have been made between Smith and defendant, Morris, was offered in. evidence, it was objected to by Morris’s counsel, because it was incomplete and irrelevant. This objection was overruled, and the paper was admitted in evidence.

The defendant gave in evidence the articles of partnership between himself and Hook, bearing date 1st day of November, 1881, which were signed by both of them and attested by Smith. The only one of these articles which has a material bearing upon the issues made by the pleadings is the 4th, which is as follows :

“ Neither of the parties shall subscribe any bond, sign, any note of hand, draft or bill of exchange, or assume any other liability, verbal or written, either in his own name or the name of the firm, without the consent of the other party.”

Morris testified that the note in suit was made without his consent, direction or knowledge ; that he knew nothing about it; that he paid the $1,000, mentioned in the agreement between him and Smith, either to Smith personally, or into the store of Hook & Smith for him; that he also gave the notes for the balance of the consideration mentioned in the agreement with Smith; and that he then intended going into the mercantile business with Hook. He then proposed to prove by himself and other witnesses and instruments of evidence that the agreement was procured from him by the fraud of Hook & Smith; that the fraud consisted in the false representations made to him by both Hook & Smith, that their stock in Atlanta was worth from $23,000 to $25,000; that they had a stock at Alpharetta worth $2,000, and another at Mazeppa worth $1,000; [90]*90that their indebtedness as a firm did not exceed $10,000 ; that they had no debt falling due under sixty-days, and that they were perfectly, solvent; that defendant, Morris, made the agreement upon the fact of these representations, 'believing them to be true, when in fact they were false; that Hook & Smith were at that time hopelessly insolvent; that they owned no goods either at Alpharetta or Mazeppa; that on the day the agreement was signed, and before it was signed, they executed mortgages oil the stock in Atlanta to the amount of between $7,000 and $8,000, and in a very short time afterwards, their store was closed by their creditors and their assets placed in the hands of a receiver. Under the charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict against Hook and the other defendant, Morris; for the full amount of the note sued. Defendant moved for a new trial, which was refused, and he excepted.

(1.) The first ground of the motion complained of the admission in evidence of the agreement between Smith and defendant, Morris, over the objections of the latter.

(2.) The second ground alleges error in the rejection of the above recited evidence. The other grounds are as follows:

(8.) Because the court charged the jury that “ the effect of the agreement in evidence between Hook & Morris was an assumption of the debts of Hook & Smith by Hook & Morris.”

(4.) Because the court charged the jury that “ if the plaintiffs’ agent held for collection a claim in their favor against Hook & Smith, and he went to Hook about it, and he exhibited to such agent the agreement above referred to between Hook & Morris, and then gave Mm the note of Hook & Morris for such claim, this transaction would be within the scope of the partnership business of Hook & Morris.”

(5.) Because the court charged the jury that “ if plaintiffs sold to Hook & Smith certain goods, and those goods were turned over to Hook & Morris by Hook & Smith, [91]

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ga. 86, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-marqueze-varney-ga-1885.