Georgia State Bank v. Peacock
Georgia State Bank v. Peacock
Opinion of the Court
The Georgia State Bank brought suit upon two promissory notes, against Peacock, Henry, Sommer, Duggan, Sparrow, and Caldwell, trading under the name and style of Farmers & Merchants Warehouse. The petition shows that the original payee of the notes was the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company, and that they were transferred by it to the plaintiff; and that they were signed, not by the defendants individually, but in the name of “Farmers & Merchants Warehouse (L. S.) per Sparrow, Mgr.” Verdict and judgment by default were rendered against all the defendants except Peacock and Sommer. These two, in their separate answers and the amendments thereto, each alleged in substance that he paid to J. H. Caldwell, then acting for the Farmers & Merchants Warehouse, $200 in full and final settlement of his liability to said warehouse, and that since said final settlement he had not authorized said warehouse to contract any debts of any kind for him, and he had not ratified any acts of said warehouse subsequent to said final settlement; that at the time Caldwell received this $200 he was not only acting for Farmers & Merchants Warehouse, of which partnership he was a member, but was also acting as cashier of the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company, the original payee of the notes sued on; that on the day on which said $200 was paid the-Farmers & Merchants
The evidence-discloses that just -prior to the organization of the partnership in which the defendants were partners, the Hawkins-ville Bank & Trust Company and the First National Bank of Hawkinsville had no warehouse connections, and were losing business as a result thereof; that Caldwell, cashier of the Hawkins-ville Bank & Trust Company, and Mr. Peacock, connected with the First National Bank, decided to organize the warehouse partnership, and took in with them as partners the other defendants; that one of the partners, Mr. Sparrow, was manager of the warehouse; that the warehouse was not a success; that Mr. Caldwell, a member of the partnership and also cashier of the bank which was the original payee of the notes sued on, came to Mr. Peacock and suggested closing up the warehouse business, said $200 would close it up, and was handed $200 by Mr. Peacock for the purpose of paying Peacock’s part of the indebtedness of the warehouse; that the defendant Sam Sommer gave a check for $200 to pay his part of the warehouse debts, and that this check had written on it “assessment in full (final),” the check and the notation thereon being written by Mr. Caldwell, cashier of the original payee bank, and signed by the defendant Sommer with the understanding that “this assessment was to close out the matter entirely;” that Mr. Sparrow, signing his name as manager, gave the notes sued on after these final payments to cover the partnership debts, and after the alleged dissolution of the partnership, and that the giving of said notes was not authorized nor ratified by the defendants
“A partnership may be dissolved at any time by the mutual consent of the parties” (Civil Code, § 3162), and a dissolution “absolves the partners from all liability for future contracts and transactions.” Civil Code, § 3164. “There was some evidence authorizing the finding that the partnership had been dissolved as alleged. . . This court is without authority to set aside a verdict on the ground that it is unsupported, when there is any evidence to authorize it.” Bennett v. Watson, 31 Ga. App. 368 (1) (120 S. E. 802). Whether or not the payments made by the defendants were final, whether or not the partnership was dissolved before the notes sued on were given, and whether or not the defendants did or said anything which authorized or ratified the giving of the notes sued on, were all questions of fact for the jury, under proper instructions from the court, and there was evidence to authorize the jury’s finding thereon in favor of the defendants.
The other material questions raised by the motion for a new .trial are based on the contention that notice to Caldwell of the dissolution of the partnership was not notice to the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company, the original payee of the notes sued on. The evidence as a whole and The following evidence of the defendant Peacock in particular authorized the jury to find that Caldwell was acting for the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company, the original payee and transferor of the notes sued on: “The Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company and the First National Bank were entirely out of the cotton business. We had no warehouse connections, losing all the business, and after consulting with Mr. Caldwell (cashier of the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company) we decided we were going to burst into it some way or other, and the organization of the warehouse was the result.' . . I thought it was an undertaking of the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company and the First National Bank. ■ . . I think Mr. Caldwell was at that time cashier of the Hawkinsville Bank & Trust Company. He was with them I know.” This arrangement having
It appearing that the notes sued on were given by the manager of the partnership after its dissolution, that the defendants neither authorized nor ratified the giving of the notes; that the original payee had notice of the dissolution, and that the transferee took the notes after maturity, the notice to the original payee ivas notice to the transferee and is binding upon it.
None of the grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial show cause for a reversal of the judgment below. The .court properly overruled the demurrers to the amended answers, and the refusal to grant a new trial was not error.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.