South Georgia Trust Co. v. Crandall

170 S.E. 333, 47 Ga. App. 328, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 396
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 27, 1933
Docket22679
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 170 S.E. 333 (South Georgia Trust Co. v. Crandall) 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
South Georgia Trust Co. v. Crandall, 170 S.E. 333, 47 Ga. App. 328, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 396 (Ga. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

1. Certain grounds of the motion for a new trial complain of the introduction of evidence as to the official character and position of various officers of the plaintiff trust company and as to who constituted its executive committee. The plaintiff was a corporation, and before notice on its part of the alleged defects in the note sued on could be shown by the defendants, it was necessary for them to show that the managing officer or officers of the corporation had knowledge or notice thereof. This was a material and vital issue. As a general rule,- the highest and best evidence of who the officers or board of directors of a corporation are is to be found in the minutes of the corporation; and before parol evidence thereof can be introduced, over timely and proper objection, the minutes must be produced or accounted for, or some proper foundation laid for the introduction of secondary evidence, where the identity of the officers or board of directors of the corporation is a material and vital fact to be proved in the case. Camp v. State, 31 Ga. App. 737 (122 S. E. 249) ; Kaylor v. Carrollton Bank, 37 Ga. App. 664 (141 S. E. 422) ; Bank of Garfield v. Clark, 138 Ga. 798 (7) (76 S. E. 95); Caudell v. Athens Savings Bank, 140 Ga. 713 (79 S. E. 776). Under the principles laid down in these cases, we think that the court [329]*329erred in admitting tlie testimony complained of in these grounds of the motion for new trial.

2. The court did not err in permitting an officer of the plaintiff trust company to testify that some officer of the plaintiff made up the file which contained two duplicate unsigned agreements for a deed relative to the real-estate transaction between the original payee of the note and the defendants. This witness properly testified that some officer of the bank made up the file, and that he was not sure whether or not he made it, but that generally the secretary of the plaintiff would make the files up.

3. It was not error for the court to admit the testimony of an officer of the plaintiff that at the time the original payee sold the note to the plaintiff he stated that it was for the purchase-money of real estate; and that he (the witness) was not sure whether the payee said an agreement for a deed or a bond for title had been given. This evidence was material, and, under the other evidence in the case, could have been considered by the jury in determining whether or not this officer of the plaintiff was put on sufficient notice to cause him to inquire into the transaction, and whether or not such an inquiry would have led to a discovery of the alleged defects in the note sued on, before the plaintiff purchased it.

4. It was not error for the court to permit one of the defendants to testify that the note sued on was to be held by the original payee until the trade between them should become completed; that these negotiations looking to the transfer of the stock and conveyance of the lots and payment of the notes were still in progress towards the end of the year 1926, when the large note was split up into two notes, one of which was the note sued on in this case; and that these two notes were delivered to the original payee with the same understanding that the large note was. This evidence did not tend to vary or contradict the terms of the memorandum of agreement between the original payee and the defendants, which was in evidence. On the contrary, the evidence and the memorandum of agreement all tended to establish and show the alleged claims of the defendants as to the whole transaction. The evidence objected to did not tend to vary or contradict the terms of the note sued on. A written document may by parol evidence or other extrinsic evidence be shown not to be a contract at all because of the nonperformance of a condition precedent as to which the writing is silent. Heitmann v. Commercial Bank of Savannah, 6 Ga. App. 584 (65 S. E. 590) ; Bank of Tallapoosa v. Patterson, 38 Ga. App. 644 (145 S. E. 97).

5. The court permitted one of the defendants to testify, over objection of the plaintiff, that when the original payee of the note and the defendants were negotiating about the lots in question, they had an agreement with the original payee that the note would be paid only when the original payee had resold the lots for the defendants, and only out of the proceeds of such resale. The note sued on set forth how and when it was to be paid. The court erred in admitting this evidence. It tended to vary and contradict the terms of the written instrument sued on. It tended to change the time and manner of payment of the note as set forth by the terms of the written instrument itself.

[330]*3306. It was not error to permit witnesses for the defendants to testify that they went to the office of the plaintiff trust company and consulted with its vice-president as to the note sued on, that they saw an unsigned agreement for a deed as to the lots in the file produced by this officer, and that this agreement was signed by the original payee, but was not signed by the defendants, the defendants having given the plaintiff a notice to produce such unsigned agreement, and the plaintiff having failed to do so and introduced the evidence of its present secretary that such unsigned agreement was not now in the flies of the plaintiff and had not been there since he had held his present office.

7. The plaintiff having introduced in evidence a memorandum of agreement between the original payee and the defendants, dated August 10, 1926, to the effect that the defendants owned certain stock in a peanut products company, which stock, together with a note for $2,670, was to be exchanged for ten of the unsold lots in a named subdivision, the lots to be selected by one of the defendants, and that receipt of the note was thereby acknowledged, the stock to be delivered or satisfactory bond given as early as possible, at which time the payee would convey to the defendants the lots referred to, it was not error for the court to permit the defendants to introduce in evidence a memorandum of agreement between the same parties dated July 14, 1926, which recited that in consideration of the lots in such subdivision, to be selected by the defendants from those then unsold, they agreed to sell and transfer to the payee all their right and title in the stock in such peanut products company, on demand of the payee, that he was to make title to the lots, free and clear of all encumbrances, and that the trade was conditioned only upon the payee making further investigation into the affairs of the peanut company. These contracts tended to explain the transaction between Shemwell, the original payee, and the defendants, and were not contradictory, but both should be construed together in determining the entire transaction.

8. It was not error for the former vice-president of the plaintiff to testify that while he held this position he had a conversation with the original payee, that at the time the plaintiff bought the note sued on, the statement was made to its executive committee that the note was for the purchase-money of real estate, and that it was the understanding of this witness that the trade for the stock of the peanut products company was represented to “us” by the payee as being abandoned. From this evidence the jury could reasonably infer that the executive committee of the plaintiff knew of the trade for the stock in the peanut company.

9.

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.E. 333, 47 Ga. App. 328, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-georgia-trust-co-v-crandall-gactapp-1933.