45 Ga. 301 | Ga. | 1872
This was a bill filed by the defendant in error, as the administrator of Dalton Burge, against the plaintiff in error, as the widow of the intestate, and John W. McGhee and his wife, Susan Z. McGhee, the son-in-law and daughter of the intestate, the daughter being also the only child by a former marriage. The widow had also been twice married, and had children by her first marriage. There was no child by the marriage of intestate with his last wife.
The subject matter of controversy was the property of intestate, his widow claiming one-half as an heir-at-law, his daughter and her husband claiming the whole under a marriage settlement, entered into between the intestate and his surviving wife, at the time of their marriage ; the daughter and her husband alleging that, at the time of said marriage, it was agreed between Dalton Burge, the intestate, and Mrs. Mary H. Latdmer, his intended wife, that the property of each should be secured to the children of each by their former marriages, on the death of the owner; that the settlement was drawn up, and did so secure Mrs. Lattimer’s (afterwards Mrs. Burge) property, but, through fraud or mistake, failed to secure Dalton Burge’s property as intended. The widow insisted that the contract was drawn as intended. The contract was drawn by Abner Darden, two of whose children had married two of the widow’s] children by her first marriage. Darden swore positively (hat the marriage contract, as drawn, was in exact compliance with the instructions received from the parties. The widow swore equally positively that the contract was in accordance with
On the other hand, there are no less than eight witnesses, to-wit: Treadway, Simeon Hamil (the Justice of the Peace who witnessed the contract), Mrs. McGhee, P. H. Michael, Matilda Haney (who negotiated the terms of the settlement with Mrs. Lattimer, at the instance of Dalton Burge), James Sanders, J. D. Thompson and Radford Ellis, whose testimony, taken together, show overwhelmingly that the parties did intend to make the contract, as alleged, and many of whom flatly contradict the widow’s statements, as to her own sayings about the matter. She is also contradicted, on another points, by a Mrs. Lyon, another witness, the widow testifying that she did not know Mrs. Lyon, and had had no conversations with her about her marriage settlement; Mrs. Lyon swearing positively to certain conversations between herself and the widow about the marriage settlement.
The evidence shows that either both parties signed under the supposition that the contract was drawn as had been agreed upon, or that Mrs. Lattimer knew of the omission, and concealed it from Burge. She testifies that she knew the contents of the marriage contract, at the time of the marriage, and knew them by reading it. The Justice of the Peace who witnessed the contract testifies. that Burge called for him to go to Mrs. Latimer’s house with him, and witness the contract, and that, on the way there, Burge said the contract was, as now alleged by his daughter it should have been drawn; that they found Judge Darden at Mrs. Lattimer’s, and that “Judge Darden then produced an instrument of writing, saying that it was a marriage contract between Dalton Burge and Mrs. Lattimer, and laid it on a bureau, and Dalton Burge and Mrs. Lattimer signed it, and
Some of the witnesses testify that Mrs. Burge told them that her husband had supposed, up to about twenty months before his death, that the contract was drawn in accordance with their agreement; at which time she informed him of his mistake, and he said he would rectify it by making a will. Counsel insist that, as he failed to make a will, there was an acquiescence in the contract as it stood, even supposing it did not express the original intention of the parties. There was no acquiescence on the part of Burge’s daughter, the party chiefly interested, who was a minor at the death of her father.
The Court, in its charge, told the jury that, in common parlance, the word “ heirs ” meant children, but, at the same time, gave them the legal definition of the word. This, also, is alleged as error. The assignments of error contain the usual allegations that the verdict is contrary to law and evidence.
Judgment affirmed.