Judges: Little
Filed Date: 1/9/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
An action was brought by J. C. Baldwin against the State Mutual Life and Annuity Association, the plaintiff basing his alleged right to recover upon the following recitals of fact: He “ carried a policy with said corporation, and had given [to it] his note for” $23.76, “due on February 1, 1901, which represented the premium, on said policy for the quarter ending on or about the date of the maturity of said note.” Just prior to its maturity, “one J. Y. Sparks, a representative of said corporation, called upon petitioner, . . and agreed to allow petitioner'to give his note for the amount of the said note falling due on February 1st, without interest, and to fix the time of maturity of same ninety days from the date of the new note, provided petitioner would pay for the quarterly premium on his said policy ending April 9th, 1901.” In accordance with this understanding, he “ paid the premium on his said policy for” that quarter, and “in consideration of said payment, as agreed, the new note was to be signed, due ninety days after date, and the old note due on the first of February, 1901, was to be delivered to petitioner.” On January 30th, 1901, “ the premium paid by petitioner having been forwarded to said corporation, the new note was sent to petitioner for his signature, which he signed on said date . . and immediately returned to said corporation.” In the letter which it sent to him,it enclosed the new note, saying this note was “to take the place of the old note,” which would be forwarded to him “in lieu of the new one.” Yet, “ notwithstanding he had paid the note falling due on February 1, 1901, in the manner alleged, ” he subsequently “ received notice from the Fourth National Bank of Atlanta, Ga., that it held same for collection, and petitioner immediately wrote to said defendant corporation of the notice he had received, requesting that the note be recalled from the bank and delivered to petitioner; but notwithstanding said request, said corporation negligently failed and refused to take up same and deliver to petitioner according to agreement, but several days later, to wit: on the 4th day of February, 1901, allowed same to go to protest.” He had “a good financial credit before said note was wrongfully and negligently allowed to go to protest by defendant corporation, and his credit has been damaged by defendant because of said wrongful protest.” Furthermore, “ in addition to the damage to his credit because of said protest, petitioner has been humiliated and greatly embarrassed because of the wrongful and negli
1. The foregoing epitomizes the case presented hy the record transmitted to this court. It is essentially different in principle from the case to which counsel called our attention, arguing that the principles decided controlled the legal points involved in the present record. For a notary public “falsely and maliciously to protest for non-payment ” commercial paper, and to then make publication of his wrongful protest, is undoubtedly libelous, and not only he but all other persons participating with him in such unlawful conduct may he held accountable therefor in an action for libel. May v. Jones, 88 Ga. 308. But an essential ingredient of libel is malice, expréss or implied (Civil Code, §§ 3832, 3833); and there is no claim on the part of the plaintiff below that the defendant corporation wilfully and maliciously allowed his note to go to protest. Counsel for each party, in their briefs and arguments before this court, treated the action as one of libel; but as the petition not only did not allege that the protest of the note was falsely and maliciously caused by the defendant, but by the use of apt words negatived the idea of malice, the action can not be treated as one of libel, and the principie of law cited from May v. Jones, supra, is not authority applicable to the facts of this casé.
In the Civil Code, § 3837, it is provided that a false and malicious charge against a person which is calculated to injuriously affect his financial standing as a business man is actionable per se, in that damage will be inferred. Why., then, should a breach of duty which actually damages one’s credit be considered an act which is injuria sine damno, simply because the mischief-maker •happens to be a negligent wrong-doer, rather than a malicious one ? There is, indeed, very respectable authority -for the proposition
3. In view of other grounds upon which the defendant below based its demurrer, we are called upon to determine whether the
That he sustained actual loss by reason of his financial credit being injuriously affected is, however, distinctly alleged; and this being so, the trial court could not properly assume that, if afforded an opportunity, he would be unable to show by competent evidence that such was the case. Brown v. Drake, 101 Ga. 132. It is true that the plaintiff does not state how much of the amount for which he sues represents the damages growing out of the fact, admitted by the demurrer, that his credit was impaired, nor how much of that .amount he claims by way of compensation for injured feelings. But this point was not raised by the demurrer; and the plaintiff’s failure to be more specific in this regard was an amendable defect in his pleadings, and one which will be cured by verdict, in the event he successfully sustains his contention that he has suffered actual pecuniary loss. This he must show by satisfactory proof, there being no presumption in his favor that the wrongful act complained of was necessarily attended with actual damages. It is here to be remarked that the present case does not belong to that class of cases wherein the rule obtains that the dishonor of a check by a banker, when there are in his hands funds belonging to the drawer with which to meet it, gives rise to an action ex delicto, “although the customer did not thereby sustain any actual loss or damage.” See Broom’s Com. Law (9th ed.), 84; Atlanta National Bank v. Davis, 96 Ga. 334, and authorities therein cited in support of the ruling that “ In such case, the bank, even though there was no proof of special damage, was liable to the drawer of the check for such temperate damages as would be a reasonable compensation for the injury” suffered. The rule just mentioned forms an exception to the general rule, which is recognized by our Civil Code, that, save where a tort is committed maliciously, wilfully, or wantonly, proof of actual damages is necessary to sustain an action ex delicto brought by a person whose rights under a contract have been wrongfully disregarded by another party thereto. A peculiar relation exists between a banker and his customers — a relation based upon trust and confidence,
4. It only remains to dispose of that ground of the demurrer in which the plaintiff’s petition is met with the objection that it does not disclose that the note sent to the bank for collection was “ pro-testable.” Whether it was or was not is, in view of the amendment to the petition, wholly immaterial. Of course, if the defendant association simply, by mistake, sent the note to the bank for collection, and it was not one which was subject to protest, the association would have no reason to apprehend, and would not be liable for, any wrongful act of the bank in improperly bringing it to protest. However, as has been seen, the plaintiff, by way of amendment,, distinctly alleged that the association “ sent said note to said bank for collection, with instructions to protest said note if not paid.” Accordingly, this case is controlled by the ruling announced in May v. Jones, 88 Ga. 308, 310, wherein it was said that when commercial paper is wrongfully protested : “ It matters not that the protest carries on its face evidence of its own invalidity. Its validity would probably pass unquestioned even by those who saw the writing, on the presumption in favor of the official act. . . Moreover, the hurtful consequences to the ” credit of the person thereby affected “ would not be confined to those parties immediately interested to inquire into the regularity of the protest. The news of the protest would be quickly spread to each indorser and become a matter of common knowledge in his business circle. It would run through the complex avenues of trade, beyond pursuit and correction by the true character of the protest.” Besides, in the present case, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to show, as a condition precedent to recovery, that the wrongful protest complained of did in fact have a practical effect whereby he actually sustained pecuniary loss. He should be given an opportunity to so prove, if he elects to proceed further with the case.
Judgment affirmed in part, and in part reversed.