The contract under which Carney made the payments which he seeks to recover in his action is the same contract upon which Southland Loan Company is seeking to recover an unpaid balance in its cross-action. The gist of Carney’s action is that he, as a minor, is entitled to repudiate the contract under *561 the provisions of Code § 20-201 and to recover the payments made under the contract, as the automobile covered by the contract has been returned to Southland. The gist of Southland’s answer and cross-action is that it does not owe Carney the payments which he made under the contract as he was not a minor at the time of its execution, and that Southland is entitled to recover the unpaid balance due under its valid contract with Carney. It was on these issues that the case went to trial.
On the trial it appeared from the evidence without dispute that Carney was in fact a minor at the time of the execution of the contract and that the automobile had been repossessed by South-land. Nothing more appearing, he would have been entitled as a matter of right to repudiate the contract, during his minority or within a reasonable time after reaching his majority, and to recover the payments which he had made under the contract.
Gonackey
v.
General Accident, Fire &c. Corp.,
6
Ga. App.
381 (
In support of its answer and cross-action, however, Southland introduced evidence showing that Carney, although he was in fact only nineteen years of age at the time of -the execution of the contract, was a young man who was married and a father, and to all appearances had reached his majority. .Southland also introduced evidence that when Carney made application to Southland for the loan covered by the contract, an application form was filled in by Southland’s agent from information furnished by Carney and signed by Carney and that Carney fraudulently misstated his age to Southland’s agent as twenty-two. There was also evidence from which it was inferable that the automobile was worth at least $1,210, the amount of the loan, at the time of the execution of the contract, and worth only $125, the amount for which it was sold, at the time it was repossessed by Southland.
While ordinarily waivers and estoppels are not imputable to infants, an estoppel in pais based on fraud and deceit will be imputed to an infant who has reached the age of discretion.
Brown
v.
Anderson,
186
Ga.
220 (1) (
In
Hood
v.
Duren,
33
Ga. App.
203 (3) (
The case of
Woodall
v.
Grant & Co.,
62
Ga. App.
581 (
The evidence authorized the verdict and the trial court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial, based solely on the general grounds.
Judgment affirmed.
