53 Ga. 155 | Ga. | 1874
This was a claim case, on the trial of which, the following facts are digclosed in the record:
In 1859, Henry Brown, the father and testator of plaintiff, sold to James A. Spivey, half of lot of land number fifty-five, .fifteenth district, Macon county, for $900 00. Defendant paid plaintiff, as executor of Henry Brown, all of this amount
Plaintiff also requested the court, in writing, to charge the following, which the court refused, viz.: “That if the jury believed, from the testimony, that Spivey procured the deed from Dennard to him as trustee for his wife and children, and paid him the consideration therefor, then this was a voluntary settlement by Spivey on his wife' and children, and the deed should have been recorded in the county of Spivey’s residence within three months from the time it was made, and upon failure to make such record of the said deed within the time prescribed and as above set forth, the same would not be of any force or effect against a creditor who, bona fide and without notice, may have become such before the actual recording thereof.
“That the failure to record such deed within the time prescribed by law was, in legal contemplation, a concealment of the same and a badge of fraud, especially if it appears from the evidence that the defendant was in possession of and controlling the land levied upon. . That any violation of the policy which the law prescribes, and which might work injury to the rights of a third person, was legal, though not actual, fraud.
“That if defendant had applied to the courts to set apart a homestead and exemption for his family, arid this land had been so set apart, it would not have prevailed against this debt, if they believed that the debt was in existence prior to the passage of the law authorizing the laying out and setting apart of a homestead; and what the defendant could not do with, he could not do without, the sanction of the courts.
“That if the jury should believe that the execution levied, was for the purchase money of a piece of land which Spivey exchanged for the land settled on his family, and that Spivey bought the land exchanged from Brown’s father and testator, then the land settled should be held subject to the extent to
“That while the mere fact that a man was indebted at the time of making a gift would not render the gift void, yet if it be founded merely upon a good consideration, such as blood or affection, it may be set aside, if it appears that the party making it was in embarrassed circumstances when it was made, for a man must be just before he is generous, and is bound, both legally and morally, to pay his debts before giving away his property.”
The court then charged, “that if Spivey was not insolvent at the time of making the conveyance — that is, if he was not unable to pay his debts, then he had not only a right to make such gift, but it was his duty to mahe-j>rovision for his family, and the transaction would be good and valid against this claim. That the fact that the land purchased of Brown’s father and testator was a part of the consideration for the exchange of the land settled, did not strengthen the plain tiff’s equity.”
To which charge as given, and refusal to charge as requested, the plaintiff excepted.
The court also charged the jury, at the request of plaintiff, “that although the defendant in execution may have disavowed any fraudulent intent in the procurement of the deed, yet this is a conclusion to which the jury should not assent, if all the facts and circumstances given in evidence go to show the contrary.” The jury found the property not subject.
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.