120 Ga. 1023 | Ga. | 1904
Frank E. Fleming filed, his petition against the Georgia Railroad Bank, alleging, substantially : On August 26, 1901, Antoine P. Carr purchased from John W. Dickey, for the sum of $3,030, a certain lot of land in the city of Augusta (described by metes and bounds). The deed to this lot was, at the direction of Carr, made to the defendant bank in order to secure a promised loan by it to Carr of $1,000. Dickey had no negotiations at all with the bank concerning such sale or conveyance. On August 31, 1901, the Georgia Railroad Bank fulfilled its promise and made the loan to Carr, accepting delivery of the deed as security therefor; but the deed was not recorded until February 18,1903. On November 25, 1901, Carr paid off the balance of the loan he
The defendant demurred to the petition on the grounds, that it was without equity and set forth no cause of action; that plaintiff acquired a mere equity in the land, which was subject to any counter-claim which defendant might have against plaintiff’s assignor, A. P. Carr;' and that defendant had no notice of any transfer by A. P. Carr to plaintiff of his equity in the premises, and Vas justified in dealing with Carr as the owner of the equity. The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff excepts to the judgment sustaining the demurrer.
The right of the plaintiff, Fleming, to require the Georgia Eailroad Bank to execute to him a conveyance of all its 'right, title, and interest in the lot of land, upon payment of the amount due on the $2,200 note, depends upon whether Carr could have maintained the same action which Fleming is prosecuting. Carr’s deed to the Commercial Bank conveyed only his equity of redemption; and Fleming, under his deed from the Commercial Bank, acquired only such title as that bank had. It is therefore pertinent to inquire into Carr’s right to compel a conveyance from the Georgia Eailroad Bank, under the facts alleged in the petition. When Carr bought the land from Dickey, he procured the Georgia Eailroad Bank to advance him $1,000, and agreed that the bank should take the title to the land to secure this loan. That the deed was taken as security for this loan appears conclusively from recitals in the instrument under seal given to the bank by Carr on November 25, 1901, and from the fact that the bank never went into possession of the land nor returned the same for taxes. The writing just mentioned further recited, that
Judgment reversed.