44 S.E.2d 770 | Ga. | 1947
1. "A contract upon which specific performance is sought must be certain, definite and clear, and so precise in its terms that neither party can reasonably misunderstand it." Studer v. Seyer,
2. The instant petition for specific performance is based on an alleged oral agreement, between an uncle and his nephew, to make a will and devise certain realty to the petitioner in consideration of personal services to be rendered the decedent during his life, a portion of which was set forth as being of a personal and intimate nature. The petition is attacked on general demurrer, and it is urged that sufficient facts are not alleged to show a contract; that the terms of the oral agreement are not sufficiently clear to authorize a decree of performance; and further that the allegations of the petition with respect to the value of the alleged services rendered were not sufficient to make it appear that the contract is equitable and just. The allegations of the petition as amended, insofar as they relate to the questions here presented, are set forth fully in the statement of facts, to which reference is made.
(a) The petition was good as against general demurrer, in that the date of the alleged contract sued on and the period for its performance are alleged; its terms are sufficiently clear, in that a valuable and adequate consideration with expressed mutual obligations is set forth, showing the relative values of the expressed and described services to be performed by the plaintiff and the expressed and described compensation to be received therefor. Actual performance by the plaintiff of the alleged contract and nonperformance by the deceased were also alleged.
3. Under the above rulings, the trial court erred in sustaining general demurrers and dismissing the petition as amended.
4. Since the trial court sustained the defendant's general demurrer and dismissed the petition as amended, a subsequent order sustaining certain demurrers to parts of the defendant's answer cannot be reviewed by this court on a cross-bill of exceptions filed by the defendant. This is true for the reason that the defendant's answer was filed subject to his general demurrer testing the sufficiency of the petition; and since the demurrers were sustained and the petition was dismissed, there were no longer any pleadings left in the case and all subsequent proceedings were necessarily nugatory. See Crawford v. Carter,
Judgment reversed on the main bill of exceptions; cross-bill dismissed. All the Justices concur, except Wyatt, J., who took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
The trial court sustained general demurrers to the petition as amended and dismissed the suit. The main bill of exceptions is brought from that order; the cross-bill of exceptions, from the *776 order sustaining certain demurrers and striking a portion of the defendant's answer, which order was entered after the petition had been dismissed on general demurrer.