32 S.E.2d 389 | Ga. | 1944
1. Where the plaintiff in a divorce suit sought to have a lot of land a warded to her as alimony, and intended to describe an improved lot owned by her husband, but by inadvertence described an unimproved lot of her own, and a verdict awarding her the unimproved lot as alimony was received and published and the jury dispersed, the presiding judge could not amend or reform the verdict so as to make it describe the improved lot.
2. Where pleadings contain two inconsistent descriptions of land, one giving the lot number together with the metes and bounds, and the other describing the land by reference to a mortgage and as being occupied by a named tenant, the description by metes and bounds will prevail.
3. In an ejectment suit against the plaintiff in the divorce suit, the averments of her answer to the ejectment suit that she was owner of the improved lot (from which it was sought to eject her) because it had been awarded to her as alimony in the divorce suit, were subject to demurrer on the ground that they failed to set forth any defense.
4. The averments that the improved lot was purchased and paid for by the defendant (plaintiff in the divorce suit), and that for convenience the title was taken in the name of her husband, it being intended that the defendant should be the owner of the property and that her husband would hold the title for her, were sufficient to set forth a defense to the action in ejectment, and the trial judge did not err in overruling the demurrer in so far as it attacked such allegations as constituting no defense.
5. The evidence failed to show that the improved lot was purchased with the defendant's money, as averred in her answer, and accordingly the trial judge erred in directing a verdict in favor of the defendant.
2. Counsel for the defendant insist, however, that, independently of reformation, the description in the petition for divorce, which was followed in the verdict of the jury and the decree of the court, was sufficient to convey title to the improved lot. In support of this contention they cite Summerlin
v. Hesterly,
While it is alleged that each of the additional words of description applied to the improved lot, the facts set forth could have applied to unimproved property. "If two clauses in a deed are utterly inconsistent, the former shall prevail; but the intention of the parties, from the whole instrument, should, if possible, be ascertained and carried into effect." Code, § 29-109. Where a deed contains two descriptions of the land conveyed, one general and the other particular, if there is any repugnance, the particular description will prevail. Osteen v.Wynn,
3. Applying the rulings announced in the first and second divisions of this opinion, the trial judge erred in overruling the plaintiff's demurrer in so far as it sought to strike the averments of the defendant's answer which set forth that she was entitled to the improved lot because it had been awarded to her as alimony in the divorce suit.
4. The defendant's amended answer also averred substantially the following: On November 1, 1938, the improved lot was purchased and paid for by the defendant, and for convenience the title thereto was taken in the name of her then husband, it being intended that the defendant should be the owner of the property, and that her husband would hold the title thereto for her. A deed was delivered to the defendant, who at all times since has held the deed and has had actual possession of the improved lot. The above averments were not subject to demurrer on the ground that they failed to set forth any valid defense to the action in ejectment, and the trial judge did not err in overruling the plaintiff's demurrer in so far as it attacked such allegations as constituting no defense.
5. On the trial of the ejectment case, the evidence for the plaintiff was to the effect that the improved lot in question was purchased by the plaintiff with money that he borrowed from a named bank, and that the bank conveyed the property to the plaintiff after the termination of the divorce suit referred to in the preceding divisions of this opinion. On the question of whose money was used in the purchase of the lot, there was evidence for the defendant to this effect: She advanced money to her husband on several occasions with which to pay his personal debts. At one time she loaned him $1500, and at another time $1000. The money was not repaid to her. They discussed the purchase of the improved lot, and she sold certain shares of stock and turned $1000 over to her husband to be used in making a down payment. The husband, instead of doing so, purchased two unimproved lots with the $1000, taking a deed thereto in the defendant's name, and borrowed the money that was used in the purchase of the improved lot from a *683 named bank, taking title in his own name. The defendant asked him why he took the title to the improved lot in his name, and he replied that he did so to enable him to borrow money. The deeds to the improved and unimproved lots were turned over to the defendant, and she has been in possession of the deeds and property over since. She testified further that a receiver, appointed in connection with the divorce suit, took possession of the improved lot for her, and she has since paid each of the monthly notes which matured against the improved lot; and that she has collected rent from the property. Under the above evidence, the most that can be said is that the husband became indebted to the defendant in the sum of several thousand dollars, on account of money she turned over to him with which to pay his personal obligations. The defendant does not say that the improved lot was purchased with money furnished by her under an agreement that title was to be taken in her name. Since the verdict of the jury did not award the defendant the improved lot, but a separate and distinct lot, and since the evidence discloses that the improved lot was not purchased with the defendant's money, no title is shown in her to such lot, and accordingly the trial judge erred in directing a verdict in her favor.
Judgment affirmed in part, and reversed in part. All theJustices concur.