173 Ga. 343 | Ga. | 1931
Mrs. Jessie L. Greenwood filed an equitable petition against B. H. Greenwood and Joe Combs. The defendants filed an answer. The plaintiff seeks to have set aside a deed executed by her to the defendant B. H. Greenwood, dated June 15, 1921, conveying a described tract of land, which is referred to in the report of the auditor as “the farm land.” The plaintiff’s petition alleges that a portion of this farm land was exchanged for certain property on Spring Street, in the City of Atlanta, which is described in the petition, and title to this was taken in the name of the defendant B. H. Greenwood; and she seeks an accounting as to that property, and also to have title decreed in her to her proportionate interest therein. This property is referred to as “the Spring Street property.” Plaintiff also prays for an accounting, and a judgment for the value of the rentals of the property in question. After hearing evidence the auditor in his report found that the land in controversy belonged to the plaintiff, Mrs. Jessie L. Greenwood, thus sustaining the contentions made in her petition that the deed executed and delivered by her to the defendant did not convey the title out of her, for the reasons alleged in the petition, but that the deeds were void; and this finding was made the judgment of the court below, to which exception is taken.
But the auditor rendered in favor of the defendant, B. H. Greenwood, a general judgment against Mrs. Jessie L. Greenwood for the value of repairs and improvements made on the premises, and for the money expended in paying off certain encumbrances, etc., and found generally that “the plaintiff, Mrs. Jessie L. Greenwood, is indebted to the defendant B. H. Greenwood in the sum of $24,-212.73, together with' interest $4,067.88, less the sum of $9,243.40,
There are numerous exceptions to the findings of fact of the auditor, or to his findings of law which are based upon the facts; but it is not necessary to pass upon these exceptions, in view of the ruling that we have made above as to the fatal defect in the judgment. But it is just as well to point out that the exceptions to the findings of fact and the exceptions to the findings of law do not contain the evidence which would enable this court to pass upon the exceptions, nor is the page of the record where such evidence appears specified; and under numerous decisions of this court exceptions of this character do not raise any question for determination here. The judgment of the court below must be reversed upon the ground that the judgment excepted to was not authorized under the pleadings in the case.
Judgment reversed.