The allegations in the plea as amended were sufficient to set up the defense of fraud in the procurement of the defendant's signature to the contract sued on. The verdict rendered for the defendant, however, was not supported by the evidence, but the evidence demanded a finding for the plaintiff. The court erred in overruling the plaintiff's motion for new trial.
Oliver filed an answer in which he admitted the execution of the above agreement, but denied that he was indebted to the plaintiff thereon. For further plea and answer this defendant alleged that on January 2, 1937, McCosh came to his home with a paper which he requested the defendant to sign, and explained that he was representing the plaintiff as agent in Screven County at that time, and it was necessary for him to have four men of that county to recommend him for another year in order that he could go on with this company; that he assured the defendant that there was no liability of any kind "entailed in the signing of the recommendation;" that this defendant thereupon informed McCosh that he had lost his glasses and could not read the contract without them; that McCosh then told him that it was nearly dark and he was in a hurry and to go ahead and sign the paper as it was nothing more than a recommendation; that McCosh again assured him that there was no obligation of any kind entailed by the signing of it, and he would appreciate it if this defendant would recommend him to the plaintiff company; that having known McCosh for several years, and having confidence in him and in what he told him about this recommendation, the defendant signed the paper, and that thus being directed into the signing of the paper by the false and fraudulent statements of McCosh, and because of the deceitful and fraudulent manner in which his signature thereto was procured, and *Page 750 because of the advantage taken of him when he could not read the paper because of the loss of his glasses, and the haste in getting it signed, and the apparent sincerity of McCosh in making the above representations to him, this defendant denied any liability under the contract sued on.
The plaintiff demurred to all of the answer which related to the execution of the contract, because no valid defense was set out and because none of the allegations showed that McCosh was the agent and representative of the plaintiff, or that the plaintiff had any knowledge of the circumstances under which Oliver signed the contract. The judge overruled this demurrer and the plaintiff excepted pendente lite. The defendant amended his plea by alleging that McCosh "was representing the W. T. Rawleigh Company as agent in said county at that time." The allegation "at that time," in this amendment, when taken in connection with the allegations in the plea to which this amendment applies, means, in the opinion of the majority of this court, at the time McCosh procured the defendant's signature to the alleged contract of guaranty. This plea as amended is therefore to the effect that McCosh, as the agent of the plaintiff, W. T. Rawleigh Company, procured the defendant's signature to the alleged contract sued on. The plaintiff moved orally to strike the answer of this defendant as amended. The judge overruled this motion and the plaintiff excepted pendente lite.
The trial resulted in a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show the sale and shipment of the merchandise to McCosh and the indebtedness in the amount sued for. The defendant introduced evidence tending to establish the plea of fraud as amended. Without going into the evidence adduced, in detail, it is sufficient to say that there was no evidence whatsoever tending to show that McCosh, in procuring the signature of the defendant Oliver to the alleged contract of guaranty, was acting as the agent for the plaintiff. Any declaration which McCosh may have made at the time, from which it might be inferred that he was acting as agent for the plaintiff, had no probative value as tending to establish agency, in the absence of direct evidence as to agency. The testimony in the deposition of H. P. Ousley, vice-president of the plaintiff, to the effect that the company delivered contracts of guaranty to their prospective customers, *Page 751 as McCosh, for the procurement by such customers of the signatures of guarantors or sureties thereto, was insufficient to establish agency on the part of McCosh for the plaintiff in procuring the signature of the defendant. In Campbell v.Murray, 62 Ga. 86 (4), it was held as follows: "A debtor is not the agent of his creditor in procuring security, though the creditor designate the very security required, and furnish to the debtor the instruments of writing which he demands to be executed by third persons as a condition precedent to granting indulgence on the debt." The rule is stated in 60 C. J. 61, as follows: "Fraud practiced by the principal alone upon the surety, without any participation on the part of the creditor or obligee, in inducing the surety to enter into the suretyship contract will not affect the liability of the latter."
While the plea as amended sufficiently set out fraud by McCosh, as the agent of the plaintiff, in procuring the defendant's signature to the contract of guaranty, the evidence, in failing to show that McCosh, when procuring the signature of the defendant, was acting as the agent of the plaintiff, failed to sustain the plea of fraud. The undisputed evidence otherwise demanded a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of the indebtedness of McCosh to the plaintiff.
The court did not err in overruling the motion to dismiss or strike the plea and answer as amended, but did err in overruling the plaintiff's motion for new trial.
The above opinion is written on rehearing. The judgment of affirmance is vacated, and a judgment of reversal is now rendered.
Judgment reversed. Felton, J., concurs.