Pledger v. McCauley

25 Ga. 46
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Ga. 46 (Pledger v. McCauley) 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
Pledger v. McCauley, 25 Ga. 46 (Ga. 1858).

Opinion

By the Court.

McDonald, J.

delivering the opinion.

The error assigned in this case is on the refusal of the Court to dissolve the injunction on the coming in of the answers. The defendant, Thomas Pledger, had taken the assignment, of twenty-five Ji. fas. issued from a Justices’ Court in favor of Hickman, Westcott & Co., against the complainant and Allen Pledger, the other defendant. He had ordered some of them to be levied on the property of the eomplaihant, and others he had directed to be returned, and ea. sas. to be issued in their stead, and had ordered the complainant to be arrested thereon. The complainant then filed [47]*47this bill, enjoining the said executions against the property and the body of the complainant from proceeding, charging them to have been paid off with the money of the defendant, Allen. Pledger, and fraudulently assigned to Thomas, for the purpose of harrassing the complainant. Among other things, the bill alleges a partnership to have existed between complainant and the defendant, Allen Pledger, in a mercantile concern, and in certain land and mills; that he sold to the said Allen his interest in both, for a consideration stated in the bill, and in this contract of sale the defendant, Pledger, undertook and agreed to pay off all partnership debts; that the debt on which the said assigned y?, fas. were issued, was a debt of the partnership, which the said Allen Pledger was hound to pay; that the said fi. fas. were paid by Allen Pledger, or by his father, Thomas Pledger, with Allen Pledger’s money; and so far as the Pledgers were concerned, they were transferred fraudulently, to harrass complainant.

The bill alleges, further, the sale by Allen Pledger of half of the land and mills to his father, Thomas Pledger, for which he took his note ; that the defendant, Thomas Pledger,knew at the time of the purchase by him, of the contract by which the said Allen was to pay all the debts of the partnership. There are many allegations of facts and circumstances in the bill, on which charges of fraud are made, which it is unnecessary to set forth here.

The answers of the defendants deny that the partnership extended to the land and mills; that the defendant, Allen Pledger, was to pay the debts of the mercantile concern, to which alone the partnership extended, except from the assets transferred; and states that the individual liability of complainant remained equally with that of defendant, Allen Pledger, for any balance unpaid by partnership effects; denies that he was to pay the debts or anything to complainant, except conditionally, and refers to the note given by him to complainant, on which defendant was sued but never served, and in which suit he alleges a fraudulent confession [48]*48of judgment by an unemployed attorney. The defendants deny that for the assigned writs of fi. fa. the money paid was Allen Pledger’s money, but insist that it was the money of Thomas Pledger. They deny that the assets of the firm, were sufficient to pay the debts; state the amount that was received about #500; but they set forth no schedule of assets, aor any account thereof.

They deny that the note given by Thomas Pledger to Allen Pledger, for an interest in the land and mills, was not applied to the payment of the debts of the firm ; but on the contrary, Allen Pledger says it was transferred to certain creditors of the firm in Augusta, Hand, Williams & Co., as collateral security for the payment of a debt due them, and that he never received one cent from it. Thomas Pledger, in his amended answer, says that he paid the said note to Hand, Williams & Co., -two years and sis months before it became due, at a discount of twelve per cent.

The answers disclose the fact, that complainant filed a bill in equity against Thomas Pledger and the Sheriff, when a sum of money, raised upon the sale of Allen Pledger’s property, on the first Tuesday in December, 1852, was in the hands of the Sheriff, and Thomas Pledger interposed the said transferred fi. fas to claim it, in which hill the complainant charged that the said writs of fi. fas, in favor of Hickman, Westcott & Co., (which were the said transferred fi.fas,) had been paid off, and were kept open fraudulently, for the purpose of defrauding complainant; and it was prayed that the said money should be paid to the satisfaction of debts against McCauley & Pledger, and to the complainant, for money advanced by him on the sale of his property, to-wit: fifty acres of land he had purchased with money of the partnership. Before the bill reached a hearing, it was agreed between the parties that the bill should be dismissed; that Thomas Pledger should withdraw the fi. fas. transferred to him, and give further time, and that the money in Court should be'applied as follows:

[49]*491st. To the payment of an execution in favor of G. W. Terry vs. McCauley & Pledger.

2d. To execution ofW.W. Waring & Co. vs. McCauley & Pledger.

3d. To the payment in full of two of the twenty-seven ft. fas. of Hickman, Westcott & Co. vs. McCauley & Pledger^ still in the hands of the original plaintiff.

4th. To the payment in full of a ft.fa. in favor of Clayton A Brigman vs. McCauley & Pledger, and the remainder, being $2S2 9S-100, to the complainant, James McCauley, alleged by him to have been' paid by him for McCauley & Pledger.

I believe I have now referred to all the parts of the bill and answers necessary to present the views of the Court. The conditional note referred to in the answers, as set forth in one c£ the exhibits to Allen Pledger’s answer, is in the following words:

Four months after date I promise to pay to James Mc-Cauley, two hundred and eighty-two 98-100 dollars, provided this amount falls due him on a settlement of the firm of McCauley and Pledger, more or less. 16th March, 1852.
[Signed] ALLEN PLEDGER.”

The presiding Judge in the Court beknv held, upon a full "Consideration of the bill and answers thereto, that theinjuncúon ought not to be dissolved. There were as many, certainly, as three issues involved in the bill and answers, to be considered by the Court in making up the judgment. First, whether the partnership extended to the land and mills; second, whether the contract, at the dissolution of the partnership, bound Allen Pledger to pay the debts of the partnership irrespective of the assets; and third, whether there was fraud ■ u the assignment of the judgments or ft. fas. by Hickman, Westcott & Co. to Thomas Pledger.

In respect to the first issue, the answer of one of the de[50]*50fiendants is, that the complainant, after the establishment of the mercantile concern, attended to the store, and the defendant, Allen Pledger, attended to the mill. According to the answer of the other defendant, he worked sometimes at the store and sometimes at the mill. The conditional note .given by Allen Pledger to McCauley, taken in connection with the arrangement made at the time the first bill was dismissed, is some evidence on this point. The amount of the note was to be paid to the complainant, provided that amount falls due to him, on a settlement of the firm of McCauley & .Pledger.

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

Related

Harvey v. State
424 S.E.2d 619 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ga. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pledger-v-mccauley-ga-1858.