Peoples Bank v. Winter Inc.

132 S.E. 422, 161 Ga. 898, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 22, 1926
DocketNo. 4717
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 422 (Peoples Bank v. Winter Inc.) 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
Peoples Bank v. Winter Inc., 132 S.E. 422, 161 Ga. 898, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 360 (Ga. 1926).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

Harry L. Winter Incorporated filed a petition in two counts against the Peoples Bank of Calhoun and against Mrs. C. M. Alexander as administratrix of the estate of C. M. Alexander, deceased, alleging as follows: In 1920 C. M. Alexander made an application for a loan to the Georgia Loan & Trust Company, which resulted in that company lending $3500 to the applicant, who executed to secure the same a deed to certain described premises. The loan was not paid, and in consequence the petitioner obtained a judgment in the superior court of Gordon county for the principal sum, with ■ interest, attorney’s fees, and costs; execution from which judgment had been levied upon the land, when the petitioner learned for the first time that the Peoples Bank had obtained a prior judgment against C. M. Alexander for $4553 principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, which the bank claimed was superior to petitioner’s deed to secure its debt. The land is not worth the amount of the two judgments; the estate of C. M. Alexander is insolvent; and if the Peoples Bank should be allowed priority on its judgment, the petitioner will be unable to collect its judgment or any considerable portion of the same. Its loan to Alexander was made-under the following circumstances: Alexander had applied, through his attorney and agent, to the Georgia Loan & Trust Company for a loan of $5000. The company declined to lend Alexander more than $3500. On March 16, 1921, pending Alexander’s application for this loan he executed to the Peoples Bank a deed as security for $7418.38, which covered the same tract of land as that offered by Alexander to the Georgia Loan & Trust Company as security for the loan sought by him. But this fact was unknown to the Georgia Loan & Trust Company, except by the constructive notice imported as matter of law by the record of the deed. At the time the loan was made the existence of this deed was in fact unknown to the Georgia Loan & Trust Company. When the said trust company declined to loan $5000 and would only lend $3500, A. L. Henson, the attorney and agent of C. M. Alexander, “called a conference between the said C. M. Alexander, the applicant for said loan, and B. W. Blackmon, the cashier of said Peoples Bank, in the office of the said Henson, af [900]*900Calhoun, Georgia, and explained to them that he had been unable to procure a larger loan than $3500 on said land, after diligent effort, and that the loan would not be made at all unless the said C. M. Alexander could give the lender a first mortgage on said land; and that the said B. W. Blackmon thereupon requested the said A. L. Henson to go ahead and consummate the loan and pay the proceeds thereof to the Peoples Bank, and agreed that said bank would take a second mortgage for the balance of the said Alexander’s indebtedness to it, after the payment to the bank of the net proceeds of said loan.”

In the second count of the petition it is alleged, that, relying upon the agreement of Blackmon, the cashier, in behalf of the bank, Henson, representing Alexander, accepted plaintiff’s offer of $3500, and on January 21, 1922, Alexander executed and delivered his deed to secure the $3500, besides interest and attorney’s fees; that neither Alexander nor his agent gave any notice to the petitioner of the existence of the prior deed made by Alexander to the Peoples Bank, because they relied upon the assurance of Blackmon, cashier, that the same would be made secondary to the deed to secure debt given by Alexander to the petitioner when the proceeds of the loan were paid over to the bank; that the attorney at law employed by Alexander to abstract the title of the land, being advised by Alexander and his agent, Henson, of the agreement with the cashier, Blackmon, reported to pétitioner’s agent, the Georgia Loan & Trust Company, that there was no lien or incumbrance on the land; that the Georgia Loan & Trust Company, as agent for the petitioner, then issued a check for the net proceeds of the loan, which check was indorsed by Alexander and turned over by him to the Peoples Bank pursuant to the agreement, and the bank received the entire proceeds of the loan; that on account of an oversight of T. H. Lang, an attorney, “who was handling said title,” the agreement of the bank “to-make its deed to secure debt second and inferior to the deed to secure debt in favor of. petitioner was not, reduced to writing, all parties having notice of said agreement, having full confidence in said bank, and believing that it would live up to said agreement, whether put in writing or not.” The petitioner prayed: (a) that the deed executed by Alexander to the Peoples Bank be decreed to be second and inferior to the deed to se[901]*901cure petitioner’s debt, (b) that the lien of the judgment in favor of the bank be decreed to be inferior to the lien of the judgment in favor of the petitioner, (e) that if for any reason the petitioner should not be entitled to priority as prayed, the court decree that the petitioner be subrogated to that portion of the indebtedness of C. M. Alexander to the Peoples Bank which was paid out of the proceeds of petitioner’s loan to Alexander, and petitioner be decreed to stand at least on an equality with the Peoples Bank as to the residue of the indebtedness secured by said deed; (d) for general relief. The defendants demurred to the petition upon numerous grounds. The demurrers were overruled upon all of the grounds. The defendants excepted to that judgment, as was their right, since had the demurrers been sustained by the court the judgment would have concluded the case.

We think the court correctly overruled the demurrers. For the purpose of demurrer the allegations of the petition must be taken as true; and thus treating them, we are of the opinion that the plaintiff had a case that was not subject to either the general or the special demurrers. The special demurrer based upon misjoinder of parties defendant, and alleging that it does not appear how or why the administratrix of Alexander and the Peoples bank should be joined, is without merit, because the subject-matter of the litigation was the same piece of property which both creditors insisted was subject to their liens, and the administratrix of Alexander was a like debtor to both, and might have a residuary or contingent interest even if both debts were paid, with the right to contest indebtedness to both or either of them. The second special demurrer alleges that the petition “fails to allege any contractual relation with the defendant bank, or that said bank had any notice of any contract with C. M. Alexander of which said bank had notice. It fails to allege that either of defendants did anything whatever to deceive, defraud, or wrong plaintiff. There is no allegation of any misrepresentation, deception, or fraud on plaintiff or its agents.” The merit of this demurrer must depend upon whether the cashier of the bank was authorized to make the agreement alleged in the petition, or, in other words, whether the cashier of a bank, as such, has the right to make such an agreement as that alleged in this petition. If so, the bank is bound by it with all the consequences that at[902]*902tach. We think there is no question that in the absence of any showing to the contrary, and as a general rule, the cashier of a bank in this State is peculiarly that agency of the bank authorized to make loans, empowered to make collections, and whose special duty it is in a general way to give direction to and further the interests of its stockholders in its corporate capacity. It is alleged in the petition that the cashier of the bank requested that the offer to loan $3500 be accepted.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 422, 161 Ga. 898, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-v-winter-inc-ga-1926.