13 S.E.2d 817 | Ga. | 1941
1. Where a grantee takes title to real property conveyed by a deed upon consideration that he will furnish a home to grantor and her husband as long as they live, and the grantee dies, with the grantor and her husband surviving, and he has until his death performed the obligation so cast upon him, but his estate is insolvent, his widow may claim the property conveyed as a year's support, as against the effort of the grantor to have the conveyance rescinded in equity.
2. Under the foregoing principle the demurrer to plaintiff's petition should have been sustained.
The rule in this State is that where property, as in the instant case, has been conveyed without condition and full and complete title vests in the grantee, rescission will not be enforced for the benefit of the grantor upon a mere failure of consideration such as that caused by breach of an obligation cast upon the grantee in the deed, but the grantor will be held to his remedy in damages which he may have in an action at law. Brand
v. Power,
In the present case no fraud is alleged, and no default is charged to the grantee. He had fully performed his contract until his death. His widow, who seeks the property as year's support, according to the petition, has said she would not perform the contract of her husband. The question is: can the grantor, as against the claim of the widow for a year's support, have a decree of rescission? The support of the family ranks first against the estate of a decedent. Code, § 113-1508 (1). It is ahead of taxes. Georgia Refinancing Loan Co. v. Marietta,
It is to be borne in mind that there is no claim of fraud in the present case. The original transaction is not attacked in any way. It is not claimed that it is infected with any infirmity or wrong that would impair the title taken by the grantee. Indeed there is no breach charged to him which could be said to relate to and effect the transaction ab initio. He simply died. If his obligation to the grantor be considered as in the nature of a debt, there was nothing due on it. No breach had yet occurred. The default came by reason of his death, and the subsequent refusal of his widow (upon whom no legal duty rested in the premises) *682
to perform in his behalf. Certainly rescission could not, as we have seen, have been had against a bona fide purchaser from him at the time. We think it is equally clear that her right to the year's support, being fixed by law as of the date of his death, and the appraisers having set the same apart, is superior to the right of the grantor to claim rescission as against her. In making this ruling we have not found it necessary to consider the whole range of inquiry which might be open in a case merely against the representative of an estate or the heirs at law where no claim for year's support was involved in competition with the right to rescind. Many cases dealing with this question are to be found in the annotation to Marcum v. Marcum,
Judgment reversed. All the Justicesconcur.