137 Ga. 265 | Ga. | 1911
A married woman owned a lot of land. By deed dated September 30, 1904, she conveyed it to her son, reciting a consideration of a thousand dollars. On February 13, 1905, the grantee in this deed and his father, the husband of the grantor, executed a deed to a corporation, to secure certain promissory notes signed by the makers. This deed included certain turpentine leases, mules, horses, naval stores, etc., and also the land covered by the former deed. The land was described as the individual property of the son. This deed contained a power of sale upon default, and also authorized the grantee in it to purchase at any such sale. After default, the power was exercised, the land sold, and the creditor became the purchaser. Subsequently the woman who had conveyed to her son brought suit to recover the land. She alleged that the conveyance by her to her son and the making of the security deed constituted a mere scheme to avoid the statute, which prevented her from becoming surety, and that the agent of the defendant knew this and agreed that the defendant would make advances in connection therewith. On the trial the presiding judge directed a verdict for the defendants, and the plaintiff excepted.
A judge can not properly direct a verdict because he may think that the strength or weight of the evidence is on one side, or because he might grant a new trial if a verdict should be returned against what he thinks is the preponderance of the evidence. Un
Applying the principles above enunciated to the evidence in this case, the court erred in directing a verdict. The evidence was somewhat confused as to the existence of a former firm or corporation and the relation of it to the defendant company, and whether the agent who negotiated with the father 'and son represented the former or latter company when the negotiations began; but the same person represented the defendant company when the security deed was made, and it was made to the defendant, not to the other company. .The evidence of the witnesses for the plaintiff was by no means clear on other points. Nevertheless there was enough to prevent the direction of a verdict. The plaintiff testified: “In signing the deed, my understanding was that he [her son] mortgaged the propérty to West-Flynn-Harris Company [the defendant company] as security for my husband for some money that the West-Flynn-Harris Company had loaned him. That was the understanding.” Referring to a preliminary conversation with the agent, the son testified: “He wanted to know what we could put up as security, and what I proposed to invest in the business; and I told him and my father told him. I just simply stated to him how it stood. I told him that it was my mother’s property, and that she was willing to put it up to secure my father’s interest.” Again: “Yes, I told him I was putting in cash, and that my mother was putting in the home place to secure my father’s interest.” Still further, he stated: that he first saw the deed to him when he and his father met the agent again; that his father then handed him the deed, saying, “Your mother has made the deed to you;” that the witness looked at it and passed it to the agent; that the latter took it and went out, and after about thirty minutes returned and said: “We will take you up.” The husband testified, similarly, and also stated that the preliminary interview was with “the representative of the West-Flynn-Harris Company.”
It is unnecessary to go further into the evidence. We are not deciding how the jury should find, or what the judge should do on a motion for new trial. We merely hold that the case was not one for the direction of a verdict.
Judgment reversed.