Glover v. Green

96 Ga. 126 | Ga. | 1895

Lumpkin, Justice.

In 1886, F. F. Green was indebted to N. S. Glover upon promissory notes given for borrowed-money and secured by a mortgage upon a tract of land upon which Green and his wife resided. In November, 1888, Green having failed to pay any part of the principal or interest due on the notes, and being unable to do so, he and Glover had an accounting and settlement between themselves, by which it was ascertained and agreed that" Green owed Glover something over $1,800; and in consideration of that sum, Green then sold outright to Glover the land covered by the mortgage, executed and delivered to him a warranty deed to the premises, and took up and canceled the notes and mortgage above mentioned. The price thus paid for the land was its *128full value. Immediately after this transaction, Green proposed to buy the land for his wife at the same price, and Glover sold it to her, taking her note, payable in ten years but stipulating that interest at 8 per cent, should be paid annually as rent, and at the same time delivering to her a bond conditioned to make her titles to the land upon her complying with her contract as expressed in the note. In this note was an interlineation of an agreement to pay ten per cent, attorney’s fees for collecting the same.

N. S. Glover died in 1889. Mrs..Green made default in paying the interest, and W. O. Glover, as administrator of N. S. Glover, brought an action against her for the recovery of the same, to which action Mrs. Green, in addition to the general issue, pleaded non est factum, and also that the note in question was given by her in settlement of a debt due by her husband, and was therefore void. There was no issue as to the fact that Mrs. Green really signed the note, and the plea of non est factum related entirely to the iuterlineation above mentioned, Mrs. Green claiming that the same was made after the execution of the note, by N. S. Glover or his agent, without her knowledge or consent. After the filing of these pleas, the case was continued; and subsequently Glover’s administrator filed an equitable petition against Green and his wife, praying for a recovery of the land itself, or that it be sold and the proceeds applied to the debt due his intestate. Mrs. Green then changed front, and took the position that she had purchased the land on her own account, and repudiated the plea to the contrary filed in the former case.

These two eases were consolidated and tried together. Without going further into detail, it would seem from the record that at the trial Mrs. Green’s contentions were: first, that the note she had given for the purchase of the land having been fraudulently altered, it was not *129binding upon her, and therefore there could be no recovery in money by the plaintiff; and, second, that the plaintiff could not recover the land itself, because the note, the evidence of her indebtedness for its purchase, having been rendered void, the. plaintiff had no standing whatever in court. In other words, that she could keep the laud without paying for it, simply because the note given for its purchase had been fraudulently altered by the deceased, N. S. Glover, or his agent. The jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for the defendant upon the plea that the note was altered with intent to defraud defendants. We find further, "that defendant has never repudiated her contract for purchase of said land on the ground that it was the debt of her husband, but that it is her debt.” Upon this verdict there was a decree for the defendant.

Thus it has transpired that the deceased Glover has "been deprived of his land, and yet neither he nor his administrator has ever received a single cent of the purchase money. Such a result is surely not legally possible in any fair view of the pleadings or the evidence; and moreover, is utterly inconsistent with every idea of justice. The preponderance of the evidence would seem to indicate that the alteration in the note was not fraudulently made, but that the interlineation was inserted before the execution of the note by Mrs. Green. Accepting, nevertheless, as correct the finding of the jury on this question, it by no means follows that, because of the fraud, N. S. Glover’s estate must lose both the money and the land. We think there can be no doubt that if the note was altered by the deceased Glover or his agent, with intent to defraud Mrs. Green, she would, under section 2852 of the code, have the right to repudiate the entire contract; but in order to do so, she would necessarily have to surrender the land. While, under the facts, the administrator could not enforce payment of *130the note, she could hot refuse to pay and also keep the land. The fraudulent changing of the note would render the entire contract, of which it formed only a part, voidable at the option of Mrs. Green; but if she elected to rescind that contract, she would have to rescind the whole of. it. She could not rescind it in part and enforce it in part. Even upon the assumption that the facts were as contended by Mrs. Green, the exact measure of her legal rights in the premises would be: either to give up the land and thus avoid liability on the note; or, if she desired to keep the land, comply with the terms of her note just as it stood before the fraudulent alteration in it was made. The propositions above announced are obvious without elaboration.

Judgment reversed.