Peabody v. Fletcher

104 S.E. 448, 150 Ga. 468, 1920 Ga. LEXIS 206
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 17, 1920
DocketNo. 1813
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 S.E. 448 (Peabody v. Fletcher) 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
Peabody v. Fletcher, 104 S.E. 448, 150 Ga. 468, 1920 Ga. LEXIS 206 (Ga. 1920).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. The controlling question in this case is as to whether the Frank Scarboro Company was the agent of Peabody, Houghteling & Co. or of George Paulk.

From the sworn petition of the defendant in error it appears that the petitioner had conveyed to Paulk, on March 1, 1916, 2,550 acres of land, consisting of several lots, the deed reciting a consideration of one dollar, and an agreement upon the part of Paulk to pay oil $50,000 indebtedness due and owing by petitioner, including the Forman loan, and a further agreement upon the part of Paulk to “ultimately release and convey to Fletcher, free and clear of encumbrances, lots 15 and 43; ” these two latter lots being embraced in the tract of 2,550 acres. Paulk in reference to this testified: “I told him to convey title to me to get that loan. He was to convey title to me for the purpose of getting that loan, and he did it. He gave me the deed I have mentioned. The 2,550 acres of land. It was the intention that he should convey the title to the whole 2,550 acres of land to me to get the loan. Then after I put the loan on, I was to convey back [473]*47315 and 43 to him. I did not convey lots 15 and 43 back to him until after the $50,000 had been put on the property. It was not the intention I should do so until after that.” • The deed of March-1, 1916, was never put on record, but a deed purporting to be executed by Fletcher to Paulk on October 2, 1916, conveying the tract of 2,550 acres, was claimed by Fletcher to have been a forgery;.and there was some evidence to this effect. But the uncontroverted evidence as to the deed of March 1, 1916, executed upon the terms which we have stated above, shows that the deed conveying the 2,550 acres of land was executed and delivered-. Under the terms of this deed the title to the land was placed in Paulk effectually for the purpose of borrowing the sum of $50,000. Subsequently, on the l?th day of June, 1916, Paulk executed an instrument creating the Frank Scarboro Company his agent to procure a loan for him of $50,000. This instrument, omitting the formal parts, reads as follows:

“Know all men by these presents, that I do hereby make, constitute, and appoint Frank Scarboro Company, of Tifton, Georgia, my exclusive agents, for a period of 60 days from, the date hereof, to procure for me a loan of $50,000, to run for a period of 10 years, and to bear interest at the rate of 6 per cent, to be payable semiannually from the date of such loan, and the principal to be liquidated in installments as follows: [Not necessary here to state these installments.]
“ Such loan to be secured by deed to secure debt on 2,550 acres of farm land which I own and which is located in Irwin & Turner County, Georgia.
“ As compensation for the services in procuring such loan I agree and bind myself to pay Frank Scarboro Company, at the time such loan is obtained, a commission of seven per cent thereof, which commission or compensation shall be in full of all expense to me in connection thérewith, and the said Frank Scarboro- Company are expressly authorized to deduct such commissions from the amount of the loan so procured.
“And I do further agree and hereby authorize the said Frank Scarboro Company to receive for me such loan, and pay off for me out of the proceeds thereof all liens, judgments, taxes, or other encumbrances on or against said property, and the balance of the loan over to me.
[474]*474“ In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal, this 17th day of June, 1916. George F. Paulk.”

By the execution of this paper Paulk unquestionably created Frank Scarboro, who did business under the name of .Frank Scarboro Company, his agent to procure a loan in the amount named. It was delivered to Scarboro at the same time that the application for a loan- was delivered, and as a part of the transaction, and the loan was made upon this application made by Paulk, who had by the instruriient quoted made Scarboro his agent. From the statement of facts in the case of Merck v. American Freehold Land Mtg. Co., 79 Ga. 213 (7 S. E. 265), it appears that Merck, of Gainesville, Ga., desired a loan, and delivered to Lattner, who resided in Gainesville, a written application, describing the security offered and giving other information in answer to questions. He also signed an 'agreement addressed to Nelson & Barker, containing the following provisions: “ I hereby constitute you my agents, and request and authorize you as such to negotiate for me a loan of four hundred dollars on five years’ time, with interest at eight per cent, per annum, payable annually at such place as you may name. . . I further agree to pay you for negotiating said loan a commission of eighty dollars, to be paid at the time of the closing of the loan. . . If you succeed in negotiating this loan, I hereby authorize you to send the money draft or check . . to my • agent, R. P. Lattner, of Gainesville, Georgia, and to make^ draft or check payable to his order.” These papers were sent by Lattner to Nelson & Barker, of Atlanta, who forwarded the application to the Corbin Banking Co., of New York City. They submitted the application to one Sherwood, who was the representative of the American Freehold Land Mortgage Company. Sherwood accepted the loan and delivered four hundred dollars to Corbin Banking Co., which they forwarded to Nelson & Barker, first deducting the amount agreed to be paid to them for their services in procuring the loan. Nelson & Barker sent to Lattner a check on the Corbin Banking Company, and, he in turn gave to Merck a check on a bank inGainesville for $320. $80, or twenty per cent, of the loan, was charged and deducted before payment to Merck. Of this the Corbin Banking Company received ten per cent., Nelson & Barker six per cent., and Lattner four per cent. In this suit brought to recover the face amount of the notes, four hundred dollars, Merck [475]*475contended that the eighty dollars deducted was usurious, and contended that the intermediaries who deducted the commissions were agents of the lender. At page 230 the court says:

“It is insisted that these middlemen, all of them, should be treated as agents of the lender. Implications of agency are easily overstrained, misapplied, or otherwise abused. Here an express agency was created in behalf of the borrower, and the proof is plenary that the lender had no agent engaged in this transaction but Sherwood. ’ It matters not how many agents appear on the scene, if the lender has none or only one. If he holds control of his capital and decides for himself when he will part with it, and on what terms, and has no terms but lawful interest and good security, and satisfies himself that the security is good, he transacts his own business and is not to be judged by the law of agency. And if, doing none of these things in person, he commits them to a single agent, employed by him at his own expense, and this agent alone represents him, the principal and his agent are one, and the case is to be treated just as if the agent were the principal. Here, according to the evidence, and all the evidence, Sherwood was the agent and -the sole agent of the lender.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 448, 150 Ga. 468, 1920 Ga. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peabody-v-fletcher-ga-1920.