161 Ga. 93 | Ga. | 1925
The action now before us was originally one to rescind a contract of sale and cancel a deed executed by James B. Groover to Brooks Simmons, There was also a prayer that
After a careful review of the evidence we are satisfied that the verdict in favor of the defendant was authorized, and, having the approval of the trial judge, it will not be disturbed unless for such error plainly disclosed by the grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial as would warrant a reversal, although the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff would have authorized a finding in his favor had the jury seen fit to give this testimony the preference on the contested issues where the testimony of the parties was in sharp conflict.
In the first ground of the amendment to the motion for a new trial the movant complains that “when it appeared at the beginning of the trial of said case that J. R. Groover, administrator, the nominal plaintiff in the case, was absent, and when defendant’s counsel had invoked the rule of sequestration- as to plaintiff’s witnesses, plaintiff’s counsel asked the court to allow Dan R. Groover to remain in the court-room in order to render assistance with the case, and stated to the court that the said Dan R. Groover, although
In the second ground of the amendment to the motion for a new trial complaint is made that the court, over the objection of plaintiff’s counsel, “admitted in evidence the following testimony of witness E. A. Corey: cIn the making of this deed I was representing Mr. James B. Groover.’ . The objection urged to the evidence was that it was a declaration of agency by the agent himself, and therefore inadmissible.” In a note the court qualifies his approval of this ground by the following statement as to the matter: “In addition to the allegation and statement set out in said ground, the following transpired in reference thereto, and to the admission of said testimony of the said witness E. A. Corey: E. A. Corey, sworn for the defendant. Direct: Q. In making this deed, were you representing any of these parties? A. I was representing Mr. James B. Groover. Q. In what way and for what purpose? A. To make the sale of this tract of land, to sell this tract of land. I had an option on the land to sell it for him. Mr. Booth: I object to the testimony that he was representing Mr. James B. Groover; it is a declaration of agency by the agent himself, which is clearly inadmissible, under all of the rules. The court: He may testify he was the agent of the other party. He is not putting it on the ground that it is not disclosed how this agency arose. You might ask him how he became his agent, in what way he was representing him. To use the expression he was representing him might be a conclusion; yet the agent can testify he was agent of
The third of the grounds added by amendment complains that “the court, over the objections of plaintiff’s counsel, admitted in evidence the following testimony of witness E. A. Corey: ‘ This 288 acres, the two tracts there of Dan’s and Sam’s, is more valuable than the entire balance of the tract of land.’ This testimony was objected to on the ground that the question of what the land is worth, that is to say, the question of value, is wholly irrelevant, and that this witness’s opinion of its value, and indeed the opinion of any one else as to its value, is irrelevant and has no place in the case and does not in any sense illustrate the issues involved. The ruling of the court in admitting the evidence is excepted to and assigned as error.” It is insisted by the plaintiff in error that there was only one issue in the case — whether the deed should be reformed so as to convey only 632 acres instead of 920 acres; and that for this reason the value of different portions of the tract of land alleged to have been conveyed, or of the tract as a whole, is altogether irrelevant to the real issue. The plaintiff was seeking to reform the deed from James B. Groover to Brooks Simmons, so that it would convey only 632 acres of land instead of 920, as it was written in the deed. The defendant contended that the 288-acre portion of the 920-acre tract which was shown him before he made his offer to buy was what induced defendant to pay $12,000 for the entire tract. The witness Corey testified without objection that the defendant was taken over this fine high-ridged, pebbly land, and that it was this property that sold the 920-acre tract for $12,000. In determining the intention of the parties in the making of the deed, we think it was proper for the court to allow testimony that this 288-acre tract was a very valuable portion of the 920-acre tract, and that the remaining 632 acres was low, waste land, of very little value. This was a circumstance which the jury was entitled to consider in passing on the question whether James B. Groover intended to convey 920 acres for $12,000 or whether he intended to convey only 632 acres of the waste land for $12,000. Of course we do not mean to say that the 632 acres of land was in
In another ground of the motion for a new trial objections were made to the admission of the following testimony of the witness J. II. Brett: “I recall Mr. Dan R. Groover being at the office of the Brooks Simmons Company at some time in 1917, at which time he made a statement about the land in question, that had been deeded to him by his father. He stated that the amount of the claims against the land was so large that he was afraid he could not hold it. He said that he did not want to spend any more money on it, because he felt like he would be just losing whatever he put in it. I don’t know how long that was before the date of the deed, but it was in February, 1917.” This testimony was objected to upon two grounds: (1) Because it related to a conversation six months prior to Brooks Simmons’ purchase of the land. (2) Because the conversation was not with James B. Groover but with Dan R. Groover, who is not a party to the case, and “for these reasons is wholly irrelevant to the issues involved in the ease.” E. A. Corey had-testified, without objection, that on the day on which the deed from James B. Groover to Brooks Simmons was executed James B. Groover and Dan R. Groover agreed that the entire 920-acre tract would not bring enough at sheriff’s sale to pay off the liens against the 920 acres that were older than the deed from James B. Groover to Dan R. Groover, and agreed that the offer of $12,000 made by Brooks Simmons for the 920-acre tract was a better price than they could get otherwise. Corey testified that Dan R. Groover acknowledged that he had no equity in the land conveyed by the deed from James B. Groover to him, by reason of the fact that the liens older than his deed would absorb the proceeds of the sale of the entire tract of 920 acres. The witness Dan R. Groover denied having made the statement that he had no equity in the land, and there was a conflict in the testimony of Dan R. Groover and E. A. Corey as to whether Dan R. Groover was disclaiming any equity in the land on account of the older liens, and as to whether Dan R. Groover knew, at the time of the execution of the deed from James B. Groover to Brooks Simmons,
The last ground of the amendment to the motion for a new trial • complains, “because the court ruled out and excluded the testimony of witness J. R. Groover that he, in behalf of his father, James B. Groover, had been offered $25 an acre for the mill-pond portion of the land, by one Bill Ii. Kennedy, before the sale to Simmons. No objection to the testimony was offered by defendant’s counsel, except in the words ‘We object to what somebody offered him,’ which, we submit, does not state any legal ground of objection, and the court, on his own motion, declared the testimony to be ‘hearsay’ and excluded it (the court stating, ‘That’s not the way to prove value, what somebody offered — that is hearsay’).” It is insisted that the court erred upon the ground that “if the opinion evidence admitted by the court, from defendant’s witnesses, was admissible, then this testimony from plaintiff’s witness of a bona fide offer to buy was also admissible, and not only so but was entitled to higher consideration as a basis of fixing values, . . and the court erred in excluding it, unless all other testimony relating to values had been excluded.” Upon an examination of the brief of the evidence in connection with our consideration of this ground of the motion for a new trial, it will be seen that the witness was permitted to testify as to his opinion on the subject of value, as freely as any of the witnesses introduced in the case; and, as appears from the ground of the motion and the assignment of error thereon, no testimony offered by the witness was excluded except the statement that the witness had been offered $25 an acre for a portion of the land. As to this, the court correctly ruled that proof of an offer to buy property at a certain price is not competent in the determination of the question of value. The witness was permitted to testify what each-part of the place, in his opinion, was worth; but we do not think that the fact that he may have had an offer by some person would be a proper manner of establishing the opinion of the proposing purchaser as expressed in a conversation not under oath.
Judgment affirmed.