Surles v. State

15 S.E. 38, 89 Ga. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 31, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 38 (Surles v. State) 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
Surles v. State, 15 S.E. 38, 89 Ga. 167 (Ga. 1892).

Opinion

[168]*168 Judgment is affirmed.

The indictment against W. P. Surles contains several counts,charging him with having altered a genuine note given by J. W. Trammell February 3,1888, from a note for $5 to one for $85, by inserting the figure 8 before the figure 5 at the top of the note and the word eighty before the word five in the body of the note ; with uttering this altered note to the First National Bank of Newnan, etc. The defendant was found guilty; his motion for new trial was overruled, and he excepted. The evidence was conflicting. Portions of his statement will serve to throw light upon several of the grounds of his motion and upon the nature of much of the testimony. He stated, among other things: In 1884 I got J. W. Tram*mell and one Bingham to stand my security for $55, was unable to pay the note, and they paid it, each paying half. In 1886 I did work for J. W. Trammell to the amount of $10.30, which I intended to have on the $55 note as a credit as we had agreed. In the fall of 1886 I bought at administratrix’s sale some land, and Trammell stood my security at the bank for $200. Trammell’s son, John Will Trammell, bought some of the land I had bought, and I made the deed so as to embrace half the parcel I bought and eight acres off the other half. We differed as to the amount there would be in the tract sold; I contended there was more than thirty-three acres in the tract, so I told John Will I would make the deed and he could pay me enough money to pay off the bank note, and when I had it surveyed off he could pay me the other, as the price was $8 per acre for the amount included m the survey. When the land was surveyed it turned out that John Will owed me for eight and four tenths acres he had not paid for. I made demand on him for it, he refused to pay for it, and in January, 1888, I employed Willcoxon & "Wright to bring suit against John Will for the eight and four tenths acres. Soon after this J. W. Trammell sr. wanted to buy twenty acres of land that my wife had bought on an adjoining lot. I told him he could have it for $300 if he would allow me the free use of it for 1888, etc., which was agreed to. In the sale of the land for $300 I was to pay Trammell what I owed him, and he would give me $115 in cash, provided he could borrow $75 of it from the bank for me, and give me his note for $85, due in the fall of 1888, which added to my account of $100, as Trammell had stated it, would make the $300; that is, my account of $100, cash $115 and his note for $85. At Trammell's request I went to the bank, stated to its president the trade between Trammell and myself and showed him the unexecuted cíeed that was already drawn up. He told me I could get the money on Trammell’s note. I notified Trammell, and ho said, “Get the deed executed and bring down to me, and I will comply with'the agreement and give the note to the president for $75, and give you $40 cash and a note for $85 due in the fall, and your account which is $100, thereby making the settlement full and complete.” The president ordered the cashier to draw a note due November 1, 1888, that would draw $75 cash, which he did, and I took it. It was made for $81.85, payable to the president. I carried it to Trammell and also a note for $85, payable to myself at the bank. Trammell took the deed and signed these two notes, and then was to pay me the $40 cash and my account for $100, but said he did not have the money but would give me his note and add in the bank interest, one per cent, a month. He got his books and said my account to date was $98.85, which included half of the note paid by him and Bingham, and this left him owing me $41.15. I told him, as he could not pay the balance in cash as was the agreement, T wanted him to give me a note for $5, as I was on a trade with one Houston for a pistol and would have to give him $5 to boot. He gave me the $5 note which left him due me $36.15, and added one per cent, a month for nine months, which made $3.25, and half of the attesting fees for five papers sixty-two and a half cents, and the $36.15, $3.25 and sixty-two and a half cents made forty dollars, two and a half cents, and I took his note for $40, which closed up our transactions for the land sale of $300. He then told me that he would settle the difference between me and John Will Trammell and give me his note, as he had heard I was suing John Will. I agreed to take his note, and he added m the $10.30 he owed me (for labor) to the $62.50 he agreed to pay me for John Will, which made $72.80. I took his note and left it with McWilliams at the request of Trammell, as he wanted to exchange a note he was to get from Mrs. Brown for $72.84 for the one I had on him for $72.80, stating that it would be just as good with his indorsement as the one I had, and that it would leave only one note out when the matter otherwise would leave two notes out. I agreed to do it, and at once notified Willcoxon & Wright that the matter between me and John Will Trammell had been settled, telling them how I had settled. On February 15,1888, I saw the senior Trammell. He had the note from Mrs. Brown and indorsed it to me, and I got the note from McWilliams and turned it over to Trammell. This note of Mrs. Brown’s became due, Trammell got me to agree to renew it, and I took a note from Mrs. Brown payable to him for $91.40, which was the renewal of the $72.84 with two years bank interest and some cost I had paid for Mrs. Brown. Trammell indorsed this $91.40 note to me and I cancelled the $72.84 note, and turned it over to Mrs. Brown. Finding I could not make the trade for the pistol, I turned over the $5 note to Trammell and traded out the amount of it in Trammell’s store. Trammell in his testimony, among other things, denied that he had ever given an $85 note to the defendant; gave a different version as to how the $300, in the transaction for the land which defendant’s wife had bought and which was sold to him, was made up ; and denied that the $5 note had ever been turned over to him by defendant, or that he had agreed to or did make any payment to or settlement with defendant as t'o a dispute between defendant and John Will Trammell about the land transaction between these two, etc., etc. The motion for a new trial contained the general grounds that the verdict was contrary to law, evidence, etc., and the following special grounds: 1. Error in excluding the testimony of Wright and of his partner Willeoxon, that defendant had told Wright in Willcoxon’s presence (neither of the Trammells being present) that defendant had settled the land dispute between him and John Will Trammell, and the details of the settlement, as follows : that J. W. Trammell proposed, if defendant would sell him land belonging to defendant’s wife for $300 and take in payment what he owed Trammell, Trammell would give him $62 in compromise of his claim against John Will Trammell about the overplus of the land, that he had accepted the proposition, and that Wright need not file the suit, as the settlement would be consummated in a few days, soon as the papers could be arranged; and wanted to know what witness’s fee would be. Also, the testimony of one Barnes, who was offered by defendant to prove that defendant, a few days before February 2, 1888, the day the forged note bears date, came into his office and detailed to him the fact that he had sold the land to Trammell and Trammell was to pay him $115 in money and give him a note for $85, payable in the fall, and he was to take in part payment $100 he owed Trammell. 2. Error in overruling defendant’s objection to testimony of McWilliams, tliat when J. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 38, 89 Ga. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surles-v-state-ga-1892.