Gilbert, J.
The exception is to a judgment overruling a motion for a new trial, which was based solely upon the general grounds. The evidence was sufficient to authorize the verdict.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur.
The testimony introduced on behalf of the claimant was to the effect that it was not the intention of Burson or the bank that the lien of the deed of November 30, 1920, as to the tract of fifty acres, more or less, in lot 91 should be released; that it was the intention that the lien as to the two other tracts conveyed by that deed should be released in order that Burson might be enabled to acquire the tract of ninety acres in lot 91 described in the deed of April 16, 1921; that the bank was induced to make this arrangement because of the fact that the tract of 90 acres to be acquired adjoined the tract of 50 acres upon which it already held lien, and because of this fact the security afforded would be better than the two tracts released; that when the deed was delivered to the clerk of the superior court for record of the cancellation, the interlineation therein “as to second and third parcels of land described therein” had not been stricken. The testimony offered by plaintiff in fi. fa. was to the effect that the parties intended, in making the cancellation, to include the tract of fifty acres upon which the levy was made. The cashier of Peoples Bank, claimant, testified, in part: “In reply to the question if I agreed with Mr. Burson to release this land in order that he might get a loan from J. D. Fuller for two thousand dollars, I answer I agreed to release the ninety acres, and it was this ninety acres. I did not release the fifty acres. . . I agreed to release the ninety acres for him, but did not release the fifty acres. I did not agree to release the fifty acres. That was not the understanding. . . Mr. Holderness made this interlineation up there; he wrote it. I carried that paper to the clerk’s office for record, and when I carried it there that interlineation was there and it was not stricken. That wasn’t stricken out when I sent it to the clerk’s office or car ried it to the clerk’s office.” Another witness for the claimant testified that “when Mr. Cook [the cashier of the bank] came down [to the office of the attorney for the bank], he said there was one or two tracts to be released, and Mr. Holderness said to save a record of a new deed he would just interline that, and took up a pen and interlined it.” The attorney who represented the bank in the transaction testified: “I thought the cancellation was to go to cover the tract to Mr. Fuller, and I had drawn previously to this cancellation to the whole, and I found only two tracts were involved, and I then interlined it and stated to Mr. Cook it was absolutely unnecessary to take a new deed when he was only to release two tracts, and draft a deed to the two tracts that he had previously deeded to Mr. Fuller and had Mr. Burson to execute the deed.” Burson, defendant in fi. fa testified for claimant: “I was present in Mr. Holderness’s office when the interlineation was made. My understanding was it was to be 90 acres released; that was my understanding, 90 acres to be released in order for me to get a loan from Mr. Fuller. My understanding was Mr. Cook was to release to Fuller 90 acres to get a loan.” A witness for plaintiff in fi. fa. testified: “This is the deed to the place. The bank was to cancel their deed and take a second _mortgage on this fifty-acre tract. . . They were to take a second mortgage on the 90 acres. I don’t remember about the 50-acre tract, but I know the property they held deed to they were to release their claim and take a second mortgage, in order to get money from Mr. Fuller. That 50 acres was to be included in Fuller’s deed, and they were to cancel that.” The clerk of the superior court testified: “I wrote that cancellation as it came to me. In reply to the question, fat the time you wrote it was that interlined in there with blue ink and this struck out with black?’ I answer I am sure it was there, because if it hadn’t been stricken I would have written it in there. I have no independent recollection of it being in there. I just wrote it just exactly as it came to me. There is nothing to make me remember it. . . In reply to the question if I would swear absolutely when Mr. Cook or the officers of the bank turned it over to me that line was in there, I answer, of course, I don’t have any independent recollection of it, but I don’t think I would have overlooked anything like that if it had been interlined and hadn’t been scratched out.”
8. Eolderness, for plaintiff in error.
Boykin & Boykin, contra.