Strickland v. Bank of Cartersville

81 S.E. 886, 141 Ga. 565, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 886 (Strickland v. Bank of Cartersville) 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
Strickland v. Bank of Cartersville, 81 S.E. 886, 141 Ga. 565, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 57 (Ga. 1914).

Opinion

Lumpkin, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. There was no error in striking paragraphs 11 and 12 of the answer. They set np an agreement by the plaintiff with Brooke to extend the time of payment of the debts on which the latter was liable. But the contract showed on its face that the agreement to extend was based upon certain conditions, and the answer alleged the performance of only part -of the requirements, failing to allege a complete performance of the conditions necessary to the extension. The nature of the contract will he more fully considered below.

2. In the written contract between Brooke and the Bank of Cartersville, dated June 3, 1909, it was agreed that the bank would extend or renew the obligations on which Brooke was indorser, guarantor, or surety, either on notes, deeds, or mortgage, provided that Mulhern should pay each and every monthly note promptly as they matured, and that in the event they were not paid the Bank of Cartersville was not bound to sue on them or in any way obligated to extend the debt or obligation of Brooke as maker or indorser. It was also provided, that, in the event Brooke should fail to keep paid all of the taxes upon the property on which the bank extended credit, and to maintain the insurance thereon, or keep a watchman, the bank would not be bound or obligated to extend or renew any of Brooke’s obligations, but might proceed to enter suit and avail itself “of any agreements to proceed to collect all of said debt's.”

The amendment which was stricken alleged, in substance, as follows: The defendants proceeded to perform the other terms of the contract beside the payment of $5,000 by a certain date, and did comply with such terms in a manner accepted by the plaintiff until the eighth day of June, 1911. While the taxes and insurance were not always paid as early as they became due, yet, prior to the giving by the plaintiff of any notice of its intention to proceed to collect the indebtedness, and prior to the filing of the suit, all insurance on the property formerly known as that of the Etowah Milling Company and all taxes had been paid fully, and nothing was due thereon. The Mulhern notes were given by the maker for rent of property which was later sublet, and the sublessee reg[572]*572ularly paid to the plaintiff-the first eleven of the Mulhern notes; and since then had paid rent to the receiver next mentioned. The property of the Choctaw Elevator Company, the original payee in such notes, was placed in the hands of a receiver by the chancery court of Tennessee on or about February 21, 1911, and on May 23 the Bank of Cartersville filed a petition in the chancery court, alleging that it was the owner of the notes and that the proceeds thereof belonged to it, and prayed that an order be entered so adjudicating, and directing the receiver to turn over to the bank all the proceeds collected by him.

It was contended, that, in the course of the execution of the contract, the parties had departed from its terms, that they had paid and received money under such departure, and that, before either could recover for failure to pursue the letter of the agreement, reasonable notice must be given the other of the intention to rely on its exact terms. Civil Code (1910), § 4227. The contract contained two distinct provisions authorizing the bank to proceed. The first was that, if the Mulhern notes were not paid promptly as they matured, the bank was not bound to extend the time for payment of the debts described in the contract. The other related to the insurance, taxes, etc. The allegations were to the effect that the insurance and taxes had not been paid promptly, but they had been paid in full and in a manner accepted by the bank as a compliance with the contract in that regard up to the time when a notice of intention to proceed to collect was given. If there had been a departure from the exact terms of the contract on this subject, mutually accepted as amounting to a compliance, probably the bank would not have been authorized to declare the contract at an end, on that ground, without giving notice to Brooke that he must thereafter comply strictly with its terms. But as to the Mulhern notes, the allegations did not show any waiver of their prompt payment by accepting payments after the dates when they respectively matured, as being a compliance with the contract, or as creating a waiver by means of mutual departure from the strict terms of the contract. So that on that subject no notice of a requirement of strict compliance was necessary, but by the very terms of the contract the bank was not obligated to extend the debts of Brooke. True it was alleged that the notes were given by Mulhern for rent, and passed into the hands of Brooke and from him .to the [573]*573bank, and that the property of the original payee of the notes had been placed in the hands of a receiver, who had collected rent from a subtenant of the maker, 'and that the bank had filed a petition claiming to have the fund applied to the notes. It did not appear that it had received the fund or what had become of the petition. Its contract with Brooke was that the notes must be promptly paid, or it would not be bound to extend his debts. The bank was not placed in the position of having to lose its collateral altogether and make no effort to collect it, on pain of waiving this term in its contract; and the fact that it thus sought to collect the collaterals held by it did not, under the terms of the contract, operate as such waiver. There was no error in striking certain paragraphs of the amendment offered on this subject.

3. Under the ruling in Strickland v. Lowry National Bank of Atlanta, 140 Ga. 653 (79 S. E. 539), that bank, was a necessary party to a proceeding to enforce the security created by the deed made to the two banks. The fact that attached to the petition as an -exhibit was a transfer of the bond for title by the purchasers from the maker of the security deed to the two banks, which contained a recital that it was made “subject only to the claims of said bank [the present plaintiff] and the Lowry National Bank, .’ . 'as described in a certain security deed from Etowah Milling Company to said banks, dated February 10, 1906,' . . and without prejudice to the protection and security provided for in said deed,” did not estop the defendants from setting up that whatever rights the two banks had under that deed could not be enforced by each in a separate suit seeking to condemn and have' sold undivided fractional interests in proportion to the amounts of the purchase-money notes held by them respectively.

While it may be, as a general'rule, that objection for nonjoinder of a necessary party appearing on the face of the petition should be raised by demurrer, yet where the sworn answer duly filed, which set up such defense, was demurred to on the ground that it presented no good and sufficient defense to the petition, and this demurrer was sustained, if in law the defense of nonjoinder was good, the erroneous ruling will not be affirmed by this court on the ground that the point should have been presented by demurrer or plea instead of being included in the answer. While it appears from the recitals in the exceptions pendente lite that, in addition [574]

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 886, 141 Ga. 565, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-bank-of-cartersville-ga-1914.