33 Ga. App. 444 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1925

Jenkins, P. J.

It is a well-established general rule that “the doctrine of caveat emptor applies to administrators’ sales;” and the provisions of the Civil Code (1910), § 4122, for apportionment of the purchase price on account of deficiency of acreage, or a rescission of the sale, have no application to such sales. McKinnon v. Sheffield, 149 Ga. 219 (1) (99 S. E. 855); Greer v. McDonald, 141 Ga. 309 (80 S. E. 1002); Mercer v. Sager, 129 Ga. 123 (58 S. E. 1037); Thrift v. Baker, 144 Ga. 508 (87 S. E. 676); Civil Code (1910), § 4032. Thus, it has been stated as a general rule that, “when one applies to an executor or administrator for information as to the title to land advertised for sale by such executor or administrator, or as to its quality or quantity, it is the same as if application were made to one who had no interest in the land. An -executor or administrator can not warrant the title; and this being so, his statements fix no liability upon the estate he represents nor upon himself.” Wells v. Harper, 81 Ga. 194 (6 S. E. 913, 12 Am. St. Rep. 310). But there are recognized exceptions to this rule. A fraud or misrepresentation practiced by an executor or administrator in the sale of his testator’s effects is a good defense to an action on a note given for the property on the sale *446of which the fraud was practiced (Williamson v. Walker, 24 Ga. 257, 259, 260; Kirkland v. Wade, 61 Ga. 478, 480; Kingsbery v. Love, 95 Ga. 543, 22 S. E. 617; Keen v. McAfee, 116 Ga. 731, 42 S. E. 1022; Colbert v. Moore, 64 Ga. 502; Holmes v. Holmes, 140 Ga. 219, 78 S. E. 903; Jones v. Warnock, 67 Ga. 484); and the general rule stated will not charge such a purchaser “with notice as to the acreage being sold, or the boundary of the tract, where the representative of the estate fraudulently undertook to give the exact acreage” or dimensions of the property, “and to point out the boundary lines, professing to know these facts himself and not leaving the purchaser to his own resources to acquire this information. If the purchaser relied on these false representations, he would be defrauded and entitled to a rebate for the shortage in acreage” or dimensions of the property, “whether the representative of the estate knew that his representations were false or not at the time of making them.” Redfearn on Wills & Admn. of Estates, 551; 552; Folsom v. Howell, 94 Ga. 112 (2) (21 S. E. 136) (where there was no actual fraud, but the representative assumed to state exact data, selling 38-6/10 acres as 50 acres). See also Brannen v. Brannen, 135 Ga. 590 (69 S. E. 1079); Southern Cotton Mills v. Ragan, 138 Ga. 507 (75 S. E. 611).

Where an administrator of an estate applied for and was granted leave to sell a described entire brick store building, advertised it for sale as “lots 5 and 6 in block 16, said lots fronting 30 feet each on Second Street and extending 90 feet to 30-foot alley, situated in the city of Stillmore, said building being 60 feet wide,” and this advertisement was read at the public sale, and where the purchaser relied upon the truthfulness of the representations thus made as to the property being the entire building and 60 feet in width, and received a deed from the administrator, describing the lots as having such frontage, when in fact the administrator's intestate had previously sold to another 10 feet of the frontage, including the entire wall on one side of the store building, which was in the adverse possession of another, and the property and building owned by the estate actually contained only a 50-foot frontage, the general rule of caveat emptor would not prevent the purchaser from setting up the misrepresentation, in defense to an action by the administrator for the balance of the purchase price bid for the property, and obtaining an abatement or apportionment *447of the purchase price on account of such misrepresentation, where the proportionate value of the deficiency was capable of determination. In assuming to state the exact frontage of the property and the building, the administrator would be bound to know of the previous sale by his intestate, and would be chargeable with the misrepresentation made, regardless of whether he actually knew of its falsity or had no actual intention to practice a fraud on the purchaser.

Section 4185 of the Civil Code (1910) declares that “a deed to lands, made while the same are held adversely to the maker of the deed, is not void.” But the contrary rule at common law, making void all conveyances of land which at the time is in the adverse possession of another, has been preserved in this State as a special rule applicable to administrators’ sales, and section 4033 of the Civil Code declares that “an administrator can not sell property held adversely to the estate by a third person; he must first recover possession.” Booth v. Young, 149 Ga. 276 (1) (99 S. E. 886); Guthrie v. Bullock, 143 Ga. 17 (84 S. E. 59); Downing Lumber Co. v. Medlin, 136 Ga. 665, 668 (73 S. E. 33); Hanesley v. Bagley, 109 Ga. 346 (34 S. E. 584); Heard v. Phillips, 101 Ga. 691 (31 S. E. 816, 44 L. R. A. 369); Thrift v. Baker, 144 Ga. 508, 509 (87 S. E. 676); Redfearn on Wills & Admn. of Estates, 540, note. While “the object of the provision contained in section 4033 of the Civil Code hs to prevent the administrator from sacrificing the value of the property by putting it up for sale under such circumstances that the purchaser would buy a lawsuit along with the land’ ” (Powell on Actions for Land, § 349; Booth v. Young, supra; Downing Lumber Co. v. Medlin, supra), the validity of such a deed is subject to attack by others than those having an interest in the estate, even including the holder of the adverse possession, and this is true even though his own lease be void as against the estate. Booth v. Young, supra. But the purchasers at administrators’ sales, as well as at other sales, must not themselves have gone into undisturbed possession; in which event the right to relief is controlled by other equitable principles. Henderson v. Fields, 143 Ga. 547, 548 (85 S. E. 741); Mathis v. Crowley, 146 Ga. 749 (3) (93 S. E. 313).

Where an administrator’s deed to lands includes both property in the possession of the estate and property “held ad-*448Tersely to the estate by a third person,” and such respective proper* ties and their values are capable of exact division and determination, the deed will not be held altogether void as failing to pass the title to the property of which the administrator could deliver actual possession to the purchaser, but may be held void pro tanto as to that portion in the adverse possession of another. See Booth v. Young, supra (149 Ga. 280), where the deed was held void as to the portion not in possession, but the Supreme Court expressly withheld its opinion as to whether the instrument would operate as a-good conveyance of the remaining portion.

“While a city court has no jurisdiction to grant affirmative equitable relief, it may entertain jurisdiction of an equitable plea purely defensive in its nature.” House v. Oliver, 123 Ga. 784 (1), 785, 786 (51 S. E. 729); Hanesley v. Nat. Park Bank, 147 Ga. 96 (1), 99 (92 S. E. 879); Geer v. Cowart, 5 Ga. App. 251 (1-4) (62 S. E. 1054); Swift v. Oglesby, 8 Ga. App. 540, 542 (70 S. E. 97); Birmingham Fertilizer Co. v. Dozier, 13 Ga. App. 759, 761 (79 S. E. 927); Davis v. Preston, 12 Ga. App. 65 (2), 68 (76 S. E. 766). “The cancellation of a deed is a matter purely and exclusively within the power of a court exercising full and unrestricted equitable jurisdiction. The only court of this kind in Georgia is the superior court.” Bank of the University v. Carlton, 96 Ga. 469, 473 (3) (23 S. E. 388). The city court of Swainsboro has no such powers. But such a court has jurisdiction even of an equitable plea, which is purely defensive, “and which, if sustained, would result simply in a verdict finding generally in favor of the defendant, or reducing the amount of plaintiffs recovery, when such reduction is not brought about by the exercise of any of the extraordinary powers of a court of equity, such as cancellation, reformation, equitable set-off, and the like.” Burnett v. Davis, 124 Ga. 541, 544 (52 S. E. 927); Hecht v. Snook & Austin Co., 114 Ga. 927 (41 S. E. 74).

“Recoupment lies for overpayments by defendant, or payments by fraud, accident, or mistake,” and “may be pleaded in all actions ex contractu, where from any reason the plaintiff under the same contract is in good conscience liable to defendant. And in all cases where, under the laws of this State, recoupment may be pleaded, if the damages of the defendant shall exceed, in amount, those of the plaintiff, the defendant shall in such cases recover of *449the plaintiff the amount of such excess. Civil Code (1910), §§ 4352, 4353.

“Where the defendant, in a suit in a city court on a note for the purchase-money of land, files a plea, alleging that the land is owned by and is in the possession of a third person, and that the plaintiff (the payee of the note) refuses and is unable to make titles to the land to the defendant, and that the note was given and payments on such purchase-money were made to the plaintiff on the faith of his representation that he owned the land and would make a good title thereto to the defendant, which representations were false and fraudulent, and the defendant seeks a recovery of the monej' paid and a cancellation of the notes, . . the city court has jurisdiction to entertain such defense and permit such recovery.” Norton v. Graham, 130 Ga. 391, 393 (60 S. E. 1049). .

In the instant case the administrator sued upon two promissory notes for a total of $4,033.35 principal, representing the alleged balance due upon the defendant’s bid in purchasing the property described in division 1 (a) of this decision, the total consideration of the deed executed to the defendant being $6,050, the defendant having paid the- difference in cash. The defendant in her plea and answer set up that 10 feet of the frontage of the building, including all of one of the side walls, was at the time of the administrator’s sale in the adverse possession and ownership of another, that she had been excluded from its possession, that the frontage had been misrepresented as described, that she had relied on such representation, and that the alleged deficiency was worth $2,000. The original plea, termed a “plea of total failure of consideration” and a “plea of recoupment,” contains alternative prayers and averments,— (1) that, as the entire sale was void, “both parties should be placed in statu quo as of the day of the sale,—that is to saj', plaintiff, by the judgment of the court, should be required to pay to defendant all of the money paid to plaintiff,— the sum of $2,000 with interest thereon to this date, that all of the deeds executed between the parties should be canceled and said building returned to plaintiff, that defendant should be required to pay a reasonable amount for the use of said premises as occupied by her and for the time occupied by her, and that the notes sued upon should be returned to this defendant,” that “there be an *450accounting between the parties hereto, that defendant have judgment against the plaintiff for the amount paid in cash, -less the rental value of said premises as occupied bjr this defendant, that said building be returned to plaintiff, and all the papers executed between the parties hereto be canceled and satisfied;” or (2) that her claim of $2,000, “or whatever sum this court may deem fit and proper,” for the value of the wall and deficiency in frontage be allowed. By amendment the plaintiff elaborated the alleged misrepresentations as to the frontage and wall, and sought to recover “the value of said ten feet . . and said wall in an amount that said ten feet width bears in proportion to the value of said building and said lot as represented by said plaintiff.” There was no demurrer to this plea, and there was evidence tending to support the essential averments. Under the foregoing rulings, while the city court had no jurisdiction with reference to the cancellation of the deed made to the defendant, as prayed for in the defendant's plea, it might have had jurisdiction to grant the remaining relief to the parties sought in the first of the described alternative prayers, save for the fact that the outstanding deed would remain as a cloud upon the plaintiff's title, and thus prevent the parties from being placed in statu quo. The defendant, therefore, was not entitled to relief under the first theory of defense. However, under the rules stated and the evidence as to the value of the ten-foot wall and the deficiency in frontage, the jury would have been authorized to find for the defendant therefor, as a recoupment to the consideration represented by the notes. It was therefore error to direct a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount sued for.

With reference to the attorney's fees, while there was evidence supporting the plaintiff's allegations and contention that the ten days notice had been given and was received by the defendant, there was evidence from which the jury might have found that it had not been received by her at all, or within the required time. For this additional reason, as to the item of attorney's fees it was error to direct a verdict for the plaintiff.

The court having erred in directing a verdict, a new trial should have been granted to the defendant upon this ground of her motion.

Judgment reversed.

Stephens and Bell, JJ., concur.
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