145 Ga. 750 | Ga. | 1916
A more extraordinary case than this rarely finds its way into court. Some of the salient features of it, which the jury could find from the evidence, were as follows: T. A. Ausley, a real-estate agent, pretended to W. E. Smith and his associates that a certain plantation in Florida could be bought for an amount somewhat in excess of $40,000, that it was partly planted in pecan trees, and that by setting out other trees it could be sold to E. E. Vinson for $185,000, payable in installments. As a means of inducing them to make the trade, he led them to believe that Vinson had deposited $4,000 in a bank in Bainbridge, Georgia, for the purpose of making the first payment. In fact no such person as Vinson had any dealing with the bank. T. A. Ausley placed with the bank his own note for $4,000, indorsed by J. C. Mc-Caskill, and arranged for the use of that amount if needed. He was to be paid by the purchasers for representing them in the transaction. Later one of the intended purchasers decided not to enter into the trade, and Ausley obtained his uncle, McCaskill, to be substituted as the ^fourth man. He also secured a $2,000 reduction from the purchase-price named, so as to make it apparently $42,400. The vendor lived in Brundidge, Alabama. When the time for closing the matter arrived McCaskill did not go to Alabama, but T. A. Ausley stated to the plaintiffs, who went there, that his father, J. C. Ausley, who lived in Alabama, would represent McCaskill, and would pay the amount due for his one-fourth interest. An attorney for Vinson (employed by T. A. Ausley) went with the party. The elder Ausley joined them on the road, and went with them to Brundidge, but did not go with them to an office where they went, saying that he would go ahead and arrange about the payment of the one fourth of the money for the McCaskill interest; and after that he was not seen again by the plaintiffs. There was some little delay in examining and preparing papers, and in investigating the title to a certain part of the land, so that the transaction was not finally closed at that time, but the plaintiffs placed in the bank at Brundidge three fourths of what purported to be the purchase-price, that is $31,800, in checks, which was to be paid over to the vendor, one Waters, as soon as the title was arranged to the satisfaction of the attorney, in regard to the small portion of the land mentioned. The two plaintiffs who were present returned home. They did not em
The plaintiffs filed the present equitable petition showing the concealed profit and interest which their agent, T. A. Ausley, had acquired, first by reason of the $11,800 which he had induced them to put up as their share of the purchase-money, in addition 'to the entire purchase-price of the property, and which had been received back by him after paying for the whole property; and second, because of the one-fourth undivided interest in the property, the title to which had been conveyed to McCaskill, who paid nothing for it, and had later been conveyed by him without consideration to J. C. Ausley.
McCaskill' asserted his entire innocence of any participation in any fraud or notice thereof. He contended, that he had relied on the representations of T. A. Ausley; that he indorsed a note of the latter in bank without knowing anything about the use to which it was to be put, as he had sometimes indorsed notes for his nephew before; that when he learned of what had happened, he took the advice of an attorney, and, under that advice, made a conveyance of the one-fourth interest which the original deed had conveyed to him, to J. C. Ausley; and that he did this so as not to have anything more to do with it. He conceded that he was liable for $125, and said he did not know to whom the $800 he held belonged. On behalf of J. C. Ausley it was contended, that he was innocent of fraud or notice thereof; that he had offered to pay into the bank in Alabama the money representing the one-fourth interest to be conveyed to McCaskill; but that he had been informed that it was unnecessary to do so. He was not present at the trial, nor was his testimony introduced. T. A. Ausley denied any fraud, and claimed that he was not the agent of the plaintiffs to buy, but that he sold to them, and was only their agent to resell to Vinson. Under the evidence and charge of the court, the jury found against McCaskill $125, with interest (which evidently represented one fourth of the amount paid to the nursery company for a release from the contract which had been made with it, and which amount McCaskill conceded that he was willing to pay), and against McCaskill and T. A. Ausley for $800, with interest (apparently being the part of the $4,000 which had been paid to the former), and against T. A. Ausley, McCaskill,
Judgment affirmed.