
    Blalock et al. v. Smith et al.
    
    Atkinson, J. — This case is controlled hy that of Greenwood v. Boyd & Baxter Furniture Factory, 86 Ga. 582. According to the principle • there ruled, the court erred in dismissing the certiorari.
    
    February 27, 1895.
    
      Certiorari. Before Judge Bartlett. Houston superior court. April term, 1894.
    Suit was brought in a magistrate’s court against Smith and Blasingame, upon a promissory note for $75 with interest, etc. There was a judgment for defendants. Plaintiffs took the cause by certiorari to the superior court. The certiorari was dismissed upon the ground that the errors complained of were not errors of law, but mixed questions of law and fact. The note sued on was dated September 5, 1890, due sixty days after date, payable to plaintiffs or bearer, and contained a mortgage upon a printing-press and outfit, for which the note was given. On the trial plaintiffs introduced this note and closed. Defendants pleaded the general issue, and payment by way of release. Smith testified, that the note was one of two given for the printing-press etc.; that Wright at one time had the notes for collection as attorney for plaintiff's, and foreclosed the mortgage; that Smith was going to resist the foreclosure, but Wright agreed that if he would file no defense to it he would release Smith from the debt, saying that all plaintiffs wanted was the press; that some time after this he secured from Wright a written release from payment of the debt, which was signed by Wright as attorney for plaintiffs; that he did not know where this release was, had looked in his desk for it but failed to find it; it might be in a barrel of old papers in his office, through which he had not looked; that he did not know whether plaintiffs ever ratified Wright’s action or not; that Smith was then and still is an attorney at law; that the press etc. was worth the amount due on it; that it was duly sold on sale day under the mortgage foreclosure; and that it brought to the best of his recollection $76, and was bought by Wright. Blasingame testified, that on the day before the sale under the foreclosure, Wright asked him not to bid on the press etc. at the sale, saying that all plaintiffs wanted was the press, and agreeing that if witness would refrain from bidding at the sale, he would release witness from the debt; that witness then and there secured from Wright, as plaintiffs* attorney, a written release from the debt, in consideration of his refraining from bidding; that but for this agreement and release he would have attended the sale, for the’press outfit had been added to considerably and was worth more than when defendants bought it, and fully worth the amount of the mortgage debt of $150 which was being foreclosed, but having this release he did not attend the sale; that he was at the time a practicing attorney; and that he did not know whether plaintiffs had ratified Wright’s action. Plaintiffs’ attorney objected to all the evidence regarding the release, on the ground of irrelevancy, there being no valid consideration shown to support a legal release. This objection was overruled. The petition for certiorari alleged that the magistrate erred, in admitting such evidence, in holding valid the release claimed by defendants, and in entering judgment for them.
   Judgment reversed.

"W. H. Harris and A. S. Giles, for plaintiffs.

L. L. Brown and R. D. Smith, for defendants.  