Rylee v. Bank of Statham

67 S.E. 383, 7 Ga. App. 489, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 25, 1910
Docket1918
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 383 (Rylee v. Bank of Statham) 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
Rylee v. Bank of Statham, 67 S.E. 383, 7 Ga. App. 489, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 362 (Ga. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Russell, J.

1. The first headnote is a sufficient elaboration of the ruling therein contained. It appears from the record to be undisputed that there was an agreement between the plaintiff in 'error (the defendant in the court below) and a duly authorized agent of the bank, in charge of its affairs, by which the bank agreed that if the defendant would pay before a designated day the principal and interest on the note which formed the basis of the suit, the bank’s claim for attorney’s fees would be waived. It was contended by the plaintiff in error (and the record shows it was not disputed by the bank) that this agreement remained in force until the cashier of the bank received a letter from Mr. Smith, the attorney for the bank. The defendant contended that the original agreement by which the bank agreed to waive its claim for attorney’s fees, upon the condition that he was to pay the principal and interest by the first day of the court (the first Monday in October), was subsequently 'extended by the agent of the bank, for the reason that it was not convenient for the purchaser of certain cotton, the proceeds of which were to be applied by the defendant upon his note, to weigh or pay for the cotton on that day. The defendant insisted that when he stated to the agent of the bank that the necessity for weighing the cotton would cause a delay, and that he would not permit this unless the bank was willing, he was informed that it would be satisfactory to the bank whenever the cotton could be weighed and paid for by Mr. Camp, the buyer. The cashier of the bank testified that when he received the letter from Mr. Smith, the attorney for the bank, he showed the letter to Rylee, and withdrew any further extension of time. In the issue thus raised it became material to determine when the cashier received the letter; because there can be no dispute that any payments prior to that date would not be chargeable with attorney’s fees, under the agreement. The cashier was unable to give the date from recollection. This fact developed upon cross-examination; and, in response to inquiry, he stated that he had the letter in his pocket. Counsel for the plaintiff asked the court to require the witness to produce the letter, for the sole purpose of enabling the witness to fix the date. Upon objection to this by the defendant’s counsel, the [492]*492court refused to require the witness to produce the letter, even for the purpose stated, upon the ground that it was a confidential communication, and privileged because it was a communication between attorney and client. We do not think that the rule in relation to advice or information given by counsel to his client is as strict, or as well grounded, as the considerations of public policy which prohibit an attorney’s disclosure of facts coming to his knowledge through his client. The client is supposed to communicate facts which, either directly or indirectly, may relate to his cause. The attorney does not usually furnish facts, though he is always presumed to correctly furnish the law to his clients. But conceding that the contention of counsel is well taken and that the contents of the letter were privileged, in so far as any information or advice communicated by Mr. Smith to his client is concerned, still it seems to-us that the mere date of the letter (as a fact illustrative of the time when Bylee and the bank cashier had their conversation) could not be in any true sense proof of the communication, certainly not such proof of the nature or contents of the communication as is privileged. The fact that one wrote to another, as well as the fact that the letter bore the postmark of a certain date, which might be indicative of the time when the letter was written or received, has been held to be admissible, although the contents of the letter might be privileged. We do not consider the date that the cashier received the letter a controlling fact in this case; but as all evidence which tends to illustrate even circumstantially the truth of any contention of either party to a case is competent, and as the witness stated that he had the letter in court, we think the defendant had the right to have its date shown, for the reason that the date might be a circumstance corroborative of his testimony as to the time when Fite, the cashier, refused any further extension, and might have tended to discredit Fite’s statement upon that subject. The witness was under cross-examination, and it was the right of the opposite party to make that cross-examination a thorough and sifting test of the witness’s credibility. It can readily be seen that if it had appeared, from the date, that the letter was actually' written after the time that Bylee insists the second agreement between the cashier and himself was entered into, this circumstance would have been strongly corroborative of the testimony of Bylee, delivered later in the trial.

[493]*4932. It is insisted that the verdict is contrary to evidence, in that, the defendant having pleaded that he had deposited with the bank a large amount in notes as collateral to secure the note sued on, and asked the court to direct that it be returned to him by the bank in the event it was found that his indebtedness had been paid, and having proved this plea by undisputed evidence, the judgment of the court should have been so molded as to require the bank to return to the defendant his collateral. The judge found that the defendant owed the bank nothing, and entered judgment in his favor for the cost. There was no evidence to contradict the fact that the defendant had paid the bank all that it claimed; and it was therefore 'error not to enter a judgment directing that the defendant’s collateral in the hands of the bank be returned to him. The answer of the defendant upon this point was in effect-an action of trover, and the undisputed proof entitled him to recover his collateral notes, even though the evidence would not have authorized him to recover an alternative verdict in damages. It is true that city courts have no original jurisdiction in equity, and can not grant affirmative relief in equity. But they can, in many cases, mold their judgments in accordance with equitable principles. In the present case, however, there was no need to proceed according to the rules of equity; because any one who has deposited a pledge or collateral with another as security for an indebtedness due by himself to the latter may (if the pledge is refused him after the debt which it was pledged to secure has. been fully paid) recover possession of the collateral by trover. This being so, we think that where it is properly pleaded in defense of an action upon a note that the indebtedness was' one for which personal property was pledged, and that it was fully paid, and the return of the collateral is asked, the defendant would be entitled to a judgment awarding him possession of the pledge or collateral.

3. We confess that the notice of the intention to ask judgment for attorney’s fees is liable to be misleading to one ignorant of the law, who is notified that a judgment for attorney’s fees will be asked unless he pays the note and interest thereon within ten days from the date of the notice. If one should receive a notice dated August 24, notifying him that a judgment for attorney’s fees will be taken unless the principal and interest, amounting to a large sum, is paid by September 4, when as a matter of fact the return [494]*494day is September 18, and he has two weeks longer in which to make his arrangements to pay, the notice would be apt to create a feeling of hopelessness, which might yield to successful effort if the debtor knew that under the law he had two weeks longer in which to raise the money.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 383, 7 Ga. App. 489, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rylee-v-bank-of-statham-gactapp-1910.