Citizens & Southern Bank v. Seigler
Citizens & Southern Bank v. Seigler
Opinion of the Court
On February 14, 1925, Claud T. Burnett sold a house and lot in Augusta to Thomas Randall for $1500, of -which Randall paid $250 in cash, and for the $1250 he executed notes payable monthly to Burnett. A contract of sale was executed by the parties, which contains all the powers and authority usually contained in security deeds. Burnett transferred the purchase-money notes to the Citizens and Southern Bank, and delivered with them his copy of the contract of sale. After paying the first six of the monthly installment notes at the- bank, Randall abandoned the property and moved to Florida. Burnett, being the ostensible owner after RandalPs abandonment of the premises, sold the property to Sam Sexton, giving him a warranty deed and receiving from him a security deed to the property, dated April 30, 1925, reciting a consideration of $400, payable in monthly installment notes. This deed and the notes which it secured were also transferred by Burnett to the bank on May 13, 1925. The deed was duly recorded on May 14, 1925. Thereafter three of the installment notes due by Sexton were paid at the bank, and four of the Randall notes. The bank paid the full value of both the Randall and Sexton notes by advances to Burnett. On August 20, 1925, Sexton made a security deed- to Amanda M. Seigler, reciting a consideration of a loan of $700. This deed was recorded on August 25, 1925, and on the same day the security deed held by the bank was entered canceled across the face of the record thereof. The cancellation appears to have been executed by Burnett and witnessed by J. Paul Stephens. The Citizens and Southern Bank brought an equitable petition to the September term, 1926, of the superior court, based upon the notes transferred to it by Burnett, and prayed that its lien upon said notes and the collateral transferred to secure the same be decreed to be a first lien on the property. Burnett was named as the principal debtor, and Randall, Sexton, and Mrs. Seigler
On September 12, 1927, Mrs. Seigler filed a motion to dismiss the petition, because: (1) The petition sets forth no cause of action and no equitable grounds for relief. (2) There has been no service upon Randall, he being an indispensable and necessary party; and no facts are alleged which would authorize a judgment against Burnett or Sexton. (3) The petition is repugnant in essential elements, the fourth paragraph alleging that “for value received the defendant Claud T. Burnett did thereupon transfer to petitioner the said notes by indorsement and the said bond for title by delivery,” whereas paragraph three of the petition, alleging that the note attached as exhibit “B,” contains the same language, terms, and conditions, whereas exhibit “B” shows no indorsement of said note as alleged in paragraph four. (4) The petition sets forth no cause of action even if said notes were indorsed by Burnett to the plaintiff, inasmuch as it is alleged-that said bond for title was transferred only by delivery; and such delivery would not transfer or create any right, title, or interest in the land described in the bond for title, the plaintiff’s case being predicated upon the theory that manual delivery of the bond for title conveyed a right or title in and to the land from Burnett to the plaintiff. (5) It appears from the petition that Sexton made a conveyance of the land to Mrs. Seigler on August 20, 1925, and that the bond for title between Burnett and Randall was not recorded prior to the conveyance by Sexton to Mrs. Seigler, and that at no time said bond
In response to this motion the plaintiff filed amendments: (1) By adding to the allegations of paragraph six, relating to the security deed from Sexton back to Burnett and the alleged indebtedness of $400, the statement that said security deed was recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of said county on May 14, 1925. (2) By striking from line 2 of paragraph ten the name “Bandall,” and inserting in lieu thereof the name “Sexton.” (3) By alleging that the two conveyances referred to in paragraphs five and six of the original petition represented the consummation of a second attempt to sell said property by Burnett, whereby Sexton agreed to pay therefor $400 (the amount of said security deed) and the outstanding notes of Bandall for the balance of the purchase-price; that the security deed executed by Sexton recites that it “is given subject to a security deed in the sum of $1250;” that, except as part of the consideration of said sale, the security deed from Burnett to Sexton was without any consideration; that Mrs. Seigler had actual notice of all of the foregoing facts; that she had constructive notice of plaintiff’s first lien of $1250, from the record of said security deed from Sexton to Burnett. These amendments were allowed. A further amendment substituted, in one of the prayers, the name Burnett in lieu of Bandall.
. At the appearance term an entry was made upon the docket that the case was in default. The court having allowed these amendments and having denied Mrs. Seigler’s motion to dismiss the action, the plaintiff moved for an order striking the answers filed by Mrs. Seigler and Sexton, and for verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff. This motion was overruled; and the court allowed the defendants to file their answers, upon the ground that the amendments filed by the plaintiff materially changed the cause of action. Exceptions pendente lite to these rulings were taken by
The court entered a decree reciting as follows: “The Citizens and Southern Bank having upon the trial of this cause expressly waived and renounced any rights to take any judgment against the defendant Sam Sexton on account of the notes involved in the transaction between Sam Sexton and Claud T. Burnett, described in the security deed from Sam Sexton to Claud T. Burnett, a copy of which is attached to plaintiff’s petition, . . and it appearing that there was no service upon the defendant Thomas Randall in said cause, and plaintiff having abandoned its asking a judgment against Thomas Randall, but electing to take a judgment against Claud T. Burnett as the indorser upon said notes, and contending that it was entitled to a first lien for the amount of the said Thomas Randall notes upon lot No. 186, referred to in the contracts attached to plaintiff’s petition, and the court having submitted to the jury, as will more fully appear from the verdict of the jury herein: (1) as to whether or not Sam Sexton, purchaser of-lot No. 186, from Claud T. Burnett, purchased same with knowledge of the equities of the plaintiff as the holder of the Thomas Randall notes, and the jury having found by its verdict, in effect, that Sam Sexton was a purchaser from Claud T. Burnett in good faith without notice actual or constructive of the rights of the plaintiff under the Randall notes; and the court having submitted to the jury (2) the question as to whether or not Mrs. Amanda M. Seigler was charged with actual or constructive notice of the equities of the plaintiff in and to said lot No. 186, to
The ruling in headnote 1, when considered in connection with the statement of facts, requires no elaboration. See Civil Code (1910), § 5652; Calhoun v. Mosley, 114 Ga. 641 (40 S. E. 714); Lippman v. Ætna Ins. Co., 120 Ga. 247 (47 S. E. 593).
The plaintiff’s assignments of error based upon exceptions pendente lite raise practically the same question. The motion to direct a verdict, after the court had refused to dismiss the action when the plaintiff had amended the petition, assumed that the defendants had not answered and could not answer. The judge’s holding that the cause of action had been materially changed properly prevented him from concurring in this conclusion, and he did not err in allowing the answers of the defendants to be filed.
There is no merit in the general grounds of the motion for a new trial. It appears that at the time Mrs. Seigler was considering lending Sam Sexton $700 she employed an attorney to search the record for the purpose of ascertaining the validity of his title. This attorney found a conveyance which was a lien upon the land, and this claim was paid off from the funds advanced by Mrs. Seigler. It was a claim in which the plaintiff had no interest, a deed to a different party. The security deed from Eandall to Burnett had been properly recorded, but it was canceled of record by Burnett himself, the deed having been made to him by Eandall to secure payment of $1250, the unpaid purchase-price of lot number 186. Even if this was not enough to satisfy a diligent person that Bandall’s notes which the deed was given to secure had been paid, it would seem that the jury were authorized to find that due
The fourth ground of the motion for a new trial contains a recital of certain testimony given by J. Paul Stephens, a witness for the defendants. There is no assignment of error whatever in this ground. All that can possibly be gathered from it is that there was a conflict as to a material point. As the ground contains no assignment of error, it of course can not be considered.
In the fifth ground it is contended that the court illegally admitted the testimony of Sam Sexton, as follows: “Q. Did you ever pay for the property? A. Well, no sir; I never paid for it. Q. How much did you pay on it? A. Well, I paid, I think four hundred and some odd dollars. I think I have the record here that he gave me. I think I left that paper at home — $406 I think it was; that book I was looking for which I left at home has his account that he gave me.” The objection to this testimony was that the book entry of any payment was the highest and best evidence, and that the testimony as to such account was improper. We think the court properly overruled the objection and admitted the testimony. The payment or non-payment of money by a person is a fact and can be testified to as such. It is plain from the testimony that the memorandum to which the witness referred and which he was looking for, evidently more for the purpose of corroborating his testimony than anything else, was some writing which had been given to him by Burnett, perhaps a receipt for $406. This receipt is not higher or better evidence than the testimony of the witness who made the payment.
The sixth ground complains of the failure of the court properly to answer a question asked by a juror engaged in the trial of the case, as follows: Juror: “I would like to ask a question about this negro that was in here yesterday. Would he be responsible if he signed that paper [security deed] and did not know that this clause was in there, thinking he was signing a paper that did not have the clause in it? In other words” — Court: “This question will decide that. You decide whether he had any notice, either actual or constructive, of the interest of the bank in those notes, and any evidence that , has been introduced to you, illustrating
In the seventh ground it is insisted that the verdict is contrary to a portion of the charge of the court given by written request of the movant. As frequently held by this court, an assignment of error that the verdict is contrary to the charge of the court amounts to no more than the general assignment that the verdict is contrary to law; and this exception is not meritorious. The charge which it is alleged was disregarded by the jury can not be challenged by the movant, for he requested the instruction. It is sound law; but a review of the evidence convinces us, in passing upon the conflicting issues raised by the pleadings and the evidence, that the verdict is not in conflict with the instruction. To illustrate, the verdict is not incompatible with the instruction to the effect that “the law imputes to a purchaser the knowledge of every fact which appears upon the muniments of title, or which one should inquire after in the investigation of title,” as applied to the testimony of attorney Stephens that a deed said to be recorded on May 14, 1925, was not at that time a matter of record. On another branch of the case, the instruction that “if the recorded deed
Judgment on main bill of exceptions affirmed; cross-bill dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.