178 Ga. 618 | Ga. | 1934
1. “In an action on the case for conspiracy, the conspiracy is not the gravamen of the charge, but may be both pleaded and proved as aggravating the wrong of which the plaintiff complains, and enabling him to recover in one action against all as joint tort-feasors.” National Bank of Savannah v. Evans, 149 Ga. 67 (99 S. E. 123). If a husband and wife own or control several private corporations dealing in real estate, all may be joined in one action instituted by a customer for recovery of damages, and for injunction to prevent alienation of a signed promissory note and duplicate contract of purchase and sale of real estate, alleged to have been improperly taken from possession of the customer before actual delivery, where it is alleged in general terms that the act complained of was done by certain of the persons in pursuance of a conspiracy between all to commit the fraudulent acts relied on as ground for the relief sought.
2. As a general rule equity will not afford relief against a written contract because of mistake of the complaining parties as to the contents of the writing and because of alleged fraud by inserting terms therein at variance with the preliminary agreement between the parties, where no sufficient excuse appears why the complaining parties did not read the contract. Gunter v. Edmonds, 149 Ga. 518 (101 S. E. 118), and cit. King Lumber Co. v. Cowart, 136 Ga. 739 (3) (72 S. E. 37) ; Langston v. Langston, 147 Ga. 318 (93 S. E. 892) ; Stokes v. Humphries, 152 Ga. 621 (111 S. E. 36) ; Green v. Johnson, 153 Ga. 738 (3) (113 S. E. 402); Eliopolo v. Eicholz, 161 Ga. 823 (2) (131 S. E. 889) ; Paris v. Treadaway, 166 Ga. 138, 140 (142 S. E. 693) ; Martin v. Turner, 166 Ga. 293 (143 S. E. 239).
(а) The instant case differs on its facts from Baker v. Patton, 144 Ga. 502 (87 S. E. 659).
(б) One exception to the general rule above stated is where the opposite party employs some artifice or fraudulent scheme which prevents the party signing the instrument from reading it. See Morrison v. Colquitt County, 176 Ga. 104 (167 S. E. 321).
(c) “Anything which happens without the agency or fault of the party affected by it, tending to disturb and confuse the judgment, or to mislead him, and of which the opposite party takes an undue advantage, is in equity a surprise, and one species of fraud for which relief is granted.” Civil Code, § 4631.
(d) It was alleged that the petitioner, a customer, signed a promissory note and also an executory contract for the purchase of land called
3. The petition alleged a cause of action for injunctive relief, and consequently the entire petition was not subject to general demurrer.
Judgment reversed.