Wight v. Commercial Bank
This text of 42 S.E. 96 (Wight v. Commercial Bank) 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.
Opinion
The Commercial Bank of Albany instituted an action against Ed. L. Wight and J. M. Solina. Its petition alleged, that in 1896 it delivered to the defendants thirty chattel-mortgage notes, falling due September and October first of that year, aggregating $1,423.86, payable to J. M. Solina, agent, alist of which notes was attached to the petition; that these notes secured by mortgage were held by it as collateral to secure the payment of a certain promissory note due by Solina to the bank, for $1,875.83, a copy of which was attached; that Wight and Solina agreed to collect said notes when they became due and deliver the proceeds to the bank, to be applied to the payment of the note due by Solina to the bank, .and in the event of their failure to collect them these notes were to be returned; that all of the notes were secured by mortgages on personal property, and were good and solvent notes; that defendants refused to pay over the proceeds of the notes so held, or to return the same to petitioner; that at the time of the agreement the defendant Wight was a director in the bank, and Solina was the [788]*788agent of a business in Baker county, which belonged to the wife of' Wight, for whom defendant Wight was general agent, and had a general supervision of that business; and that the indebtedness of' Solina to the bank arose from the transaction of that business, and the makers of the notes so held as collateral were customers of that business. The bank claimed to have thus been damaged in the sum of $1,423.86. The defendants answered and denied all of the paragraphs of the petition which alleged that they were indebted to the plaintiff. On the trial Tieknor, who was cashier of the plaintiff, was the only witness in the case, according to the record before us. Substantially, he testified as follows: The plaintiff held, as collateral to secure the note given by Solina, certain notes of the customers of Solina, as they appeared attached to the petition. This list of notes was made by defendant Wight, and the bank had the notes in its possession. Originally the bank had notes to the amount of $4,000.00 as collateral to secure Solina’s note. These-were turned over to defendant Wight. He returned to the bank such of them as he considered solvent. Wight was to assume the payment of these notes, and with that understanding the bank delivered them to him. He has never paid anything on them. This contract was made with Mrs. Wight, the wife of the defendant Wight, through her husband as her agent, and he was to assume so much of the debt as these notes represented. Mrs. Wight vras not present at any time in a business way. He gave the collateral to-defendant Wight for collection,under the agreement that he would have them collected and turn over the proceeds to the bank. Witness and the defendant Wight went over the entire list of notes,, and the latter picked out what he said were solvent, and gave them to the bank to secure the unsecured balance, and paid the balance, and there was left due $1,423.86 on the collateral. The full amount-of the note sued on is due to the bank. At the last April term of the court the defendant Wight told the bank that if it would have this case continued he would have the matter all settled up in thirty days, but since then has said nothing about it. Solina admitted to the witness that he had collected a part of the money on the collateral notes, but did not say how much he had collected. Witness did not look to Wight individually for the payment of the money. The notes were turned over to him as the agent of his-wife, and the business was transacted with him as such. No con[789]*789tract was made with him individually. The plaintiff having closed, the defendant moved for a nonsuit as to the defendant Wight, which motion the trial judge overruled, and directed a verdict for the ■plaintiff against each of the defendants for the full amount sued for; and to these rulings defendants excepted, complaining that the trial judge erred, first, in refusing to nonsuit the plaintiff as to defendant Wight; and second, in directing a verdict for the plaintiff against the defendants. The judge, in our opinion, erred in both •of the rulings complained of.
Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
42 S.E. 96, 115 Ga. 787, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wight-v-commercial-bank-ga-1902.