Murry v. Tillman

23 S.E.2d 186, 68 Ga. App. 441, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 146
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 2, 1942
Docket29637.
StatusPublished

This text of 23 S.E.2d 186 (Murry v. Tillman) 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
Murry v. Tillman, 23 S.E.2d 186, 68 Ga. App. 441, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 146 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

J. G-. Tillman and H. Yan Burén brought *442 suit against Ethel Murry for $391.11 principal, together with interest and attorney’s fees, on a note, a copy of which was attached to the petition. This note was dated May 39, 1939, and was for the principal sum of $473.65. It provided that on or before August 15, 1939, Ethel Murry as maker would pay to the Davison Chemical Corporation or order the principal of the note. The note was signed by J. G. Tillman “as surety.” The note recited that it was given for value received in fertilizer consisting of 119 sacks of “ different,” and 15 sacks of soda. On the back of the note attached to the petition there appeared two entries, one dated “9/16” for $137.39 and the other for $44.15 by “1 B/c.”

The defendant denied that she was indebted to the plaintiffs on the note and alleged that it was originally given to Davison Chemical Corporation on May 39, 1939; that the consideration therefor was 119 sacks of fertilizer and 15 sacks of soda, which amounted to $387.85; that this sum has been paid by the defendant, by $157.94 being paid to the Davison Chemical Corporation on September 15, 1939, and that the defendant also paid on December 15, 1939, to Hinton Booth as attorney for the chemical corporation the sum of $313.61 which included the balance of principal, interest, and costs due on the note. The defendant further alleged that she was not indebted to the plaintiffs in any sum, and that any amount on the note in excess of $387.65 was entirely without consideration “and without the knowledge of defendant.”

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the “plaintiffs against defendant $391.11 principal” together with interest and attorney’s fees, and judgment was entered accordingly. The defendant moved for a new trial and the exception in this court is to the judgment denying the motion.

It appears from the evidence that in the spring of 1939 Ethel Murry bought some fertilizer for her farm from Davison Chemical Corporation through J. G. Tillman, agent; that on May 29, 1939, she executed her note to the corporation; that this note embraced a bill of sale to certain crops and to four mules, and was signed by J. G. Tillman as surety; that at the time of the execution of this note the defendant owed Tillman $85; that Tillman in obtaining the note for the purchase-money of the fertilizer, which was $387.65, included in the principal of the note the $85 due him by the defendant, and the note was given for the principal *443 sum of $472.65; that a memorandum was placed by Tillman on the margin of the note, to wit: “J. G. Tillman personal $85;” that the defendant made two payments to the chemical company soon after the note matured, amounting to $181.54, which were credited on the note; that this reduced the note to $291.11; that $206.11 of this represented the balance due on the purchase-price of the fertilizer, and the $85 was the amount due Tillman; that in December 1939, the balance due on the note being then unpaid, the note was sent to Hinton Booth for collection; that the defendant and her husband, Arkie Murry, borrowed from Dr. H. Yan Burén $212.61 in order to satisfy the balance due to the corporation, together with $6.50 interest and $9 costs; that on December 15, 1939, the money obtained by Arkie Murry from Yan Burén was delivered to Hinton Booth, the attorney for the corporation, who had the note for collection; that Arkie Murry at the time told Booth that he had got the money from Yan Burén with the understanding that Booth would have the company transfer the note to Yan Burén and put him in the position the company was in; that Tillman agreed to wait a while for his money; that Booth receipted Ethel Murry for this money which was paid to Booth by Arkie Murry, and which Arkie Murry had obtained from Yan Burén, and this money was credited on the note as of the date of its delivery to Booth; that Booth remitted to the corporation this money, and also at the same time transmitted to the company the note with the request that the company put a transfer on it, Mr. Booth at the time explaining to the company that the money was being paid for the company’s interest and that Tillman’s $85 interest was to remain; that the company should transfer the note to both Tillman and Yan Burén and thereby put Yan Burén in a position as the owner of the company’s interest in the note; that the company made a transfer on the note and sent it with the transfer thereon to Booth who delivered the note to Yan Burén and Tillman; that the transfer on the note entered by the chemical company reads as follows: “Eor value received, we hereby transfer to H. Yan Burén and J. G. Tillman without recourse our interest in the balance represented by the within note and bill of sale and the property therein described.” Later, Tillman and Yan Burén, as transferees, brought suit on the note against Ethel Murry.

It is insisted by the defendant that when the money which had *444 been obtained from Yan Bnren was paid to Booth, the attorney for the corporation, who receipted this money to the defendant, and when the note was credited with this sum as payment by the defendant, the entire consideration for the fertilizer had been paid, and that the note had been thereby reduced in principal to the sum of $85, the amount which Tillman claimed was owed to him by the defendant.

Notwithstanding Booth may have receipted Ethel Murry for the payment on the note and there may have been credited on the note as a payment the money which had been obtained from Van Burén, it was at the time understood by Van Burén, Arkie Murry, the defendant, and Mr. Booth, that Yan Burén was not paying the debt of Ethel Murry but was loaning to her the money with which to pay the debt, and was to take a transfer of the note from the payee for the balance due the payee to the extent of the amount advanced by Yan Burén. Yan Burén, therefore, it is clearly inferable from the evidence, obtained title to the note to the extent of the amount which he had thus advanced and- which had been paid to the payee, the chemical corporation.

As to the $85 inhering in the principal of the note over and above the amount owing to the corporation for fertilizer, and which represented an alleged indebtedness to Tillman, the defense thereto is only that the defendant’s promise, which was to pay this amount to the corporation, the payee of the note, was “entirely without consideration and without the knowledge of defendant.” Whether or not this set up a valid defense against the payee of the note, the chemical corporation, suffice it to say that the chemical corporation is not a party to this litigation and there is presented no question for adjudication of its rights and this defendant respecting each other. As to this $85 the litigation is to be considered to be solely between one of the plaintiffs, Tillman, and this defendant. The note as originally made was by the defendant to the chemical corporation as payee, and included in the principal of the note was the $85 which it is alleged, and as appears from the evidence, represented an indebtedness from the defendant to Tillman alone, and not to the corporation.

It appears from the evidence of Tillman that at the time of the execution of the note by Ethel Murry to the company she owed him out of another and separate transaction the sum of $85, and *445

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.E.2d 186, 68 Ga. App. 441, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murry-v-tillman-gactapp-1942.