111 Ga. 391 | Ga. | 1900
The material averments of the petition in the present case are as follows: The petitioners are T. H. Sappington and Mrs. S. K. Sappington, and the defendant is Mrs. Lucy M. Bell, the mother of Mrs. S. K. Sappington. Petitioners are husband and wife, having intermarried in February, 1898. In contemplation and consideration of such marriage, petitioners and the defendant entered into a tripartite contract, by which it was agreed amongst them that the marriage should be solemnized, and that- T. H. Sappington should furnish material necessary to build a dwelling-house upon a one-acre lot belonging to the defendant, and that the defendant after the house
We do not think there was any error in overruling the demurrers to the petition. There was equity in the petition, and the same does not seem to be subject to any of the objections set up in the special demurrers. In dealing with the case, however, we will refer only to such questions as were insisted on in the argument. It was contended that the petition was defective because there was no distinct allegation that the contract was made with any particular person. It .was distinctly alleged that the petitioners and the defendant entered .into an agreement whereby, upon the performance by T. H. Sapping-ton of the undertaking therein provided for,, the defendant was to make and’ deliver to Mrs. Sappington a deed to the lot.in question. These allegations, fairly interpreted, mean nothing less than that there was an agreement be.tw.een Mrs. Bell and her daughter that the latter should be entitled to a conveyance of the property upon the performance by the husband, of certain acts. Mrs. Sappington was the real party to the agreement .and the one to be benefited by its being carried into effect, and her husband, although he was not to receive any direct benefit from the agreement, was the person from whom the consideration was to move. If there is a valid consideration fpr.the.Dxomise, it matters not from whom j_t moved.;, thepromisee may. sustain his action, though a stranger to. the consideration. Civil Code, § 3664. Treating the petition as one setting up an agreement between Mrs. Bell and her daughter, did it set forth a cause of action as against the objections that the agreement re
In a case like the present it is not necessary that there should be any valuable consideration moving to the person undertaking to convey the property, for the reason that if the transaction be treated as a gift, it will be upheld and a specific performance of the undertaking decreed where the parties
The bill of exceptions also assigns error upon the granting of the injunction. As the petitioners were in possession of the property, and as the filing and diligent prosecution of this suit would be notice to all persons of their rights in the land, an injunction to restrain the defendant from selling or incumbering the land was not absolutely essential to the protection of their interests in the property. See Edwards v. Mulford, 35 Ga. 213; Smith v. Malcolm, 48 Ga. 343; Clay v. Clay, 86 Ga. 359. In the last two cases this court held that it was no abuse of discretion to refuse to grant an injunction restraining the defendant from selling or incumbering the land, for the reason that the plaintiff was amply protected under the doctrine of lis pendens. Where, however, the court sees proper to grant the injunction restraining the defendant from doing anything to complicate the title while the case is pending, this court will not interfere, unless in an extreme case, with his discretion in so doing.
Judgment affirmed.