158 Ga. 752 | Ga. | 1924
1. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant was indebted to petitioner in the sum of $2,000, with interest, on a promissory note; and the defendant answered the paragraph containing these allegations, as follows: “admits the allegation contained in paragraph 5 of plaintiff’s petition, subject, however, to defendant’s answer as hereinafter set forth.” Upon this issue the court charged the jury as follows: “The plaintiff, the Southern Land Sales Corporation, brings its suit against Mrs. Alice V. Joiner, and alleges that she is indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,000 on a note dated December 15, 1917, together with interest at seven per cent, from the 17th day of December, 1917, to date hereof, and also claims that they are entitled to recover ten per cent, additional on the principal, $2,000, and the interest, as attorney’s fees. This is admitted by defendant.” This was
2. Error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “I charge you in this case that where the purchaser of land seeks to avoid payment of the purchase-price thereof on the ground of fraud, he must, upon the discovery of the facts constituting the fraud, upon his first opportunity to do so, announce his intention to rescind. If he remains silent and retains possession of the land bought under the contract, without complaint, and without offering to rescind until long after the discovery of the facts, he will be held to have waived the right to rescind, and be bound by the contract as though there had been no fraud. Of course, that applies to a lady, as well as to a man.” This charge was not error. Pearce v. Borg Chewing-Gum Co., 111 Ga. 847 (36 S. E. 457); Ruff v. Copeland, 137 Ga. 56 (72 S. E. 506).
3. The court did not err in instructing the jury that the maker of a promissory note given for the purchase of land, of which the maker holds exclusive possession, cannot defeat the collection of the note on the ground that the grantor cannot give him good title, without showing clearly that there was a paramount outstanding title against the vendor. Black v. Walker, 98 Ga. 31 (26 S. E. 477).
4. The court did not err in charging the jury that “The contract of one insane at the time of the agreement, but who had never been legally so adjudged, ceases to be voidable and becomes valid and binding whenever it is shown that the obligation has been subsequently ratified either by the words or the conduct of the contracting party herself during a lucid interval.”
5. Error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “I charge you further that even where there has bee»' such actual ratification of the contract thus made, but where -oncre has been no adjudication of the fact of insanity, and the opposite party to the contract is ignorant of the conditions and has no reasonable cause to suspect it, and if the contract is fair and reasonable in its terms and it is shown the contract was entered into in good faith, without fraud or undue influence and founded upon a valuable and an adequate consideration, and that the insane party has actually received the full benefits of the contract, and the party cannot be restored to statu quo, the liability under the contract will be upheld.” This charge was error, under the ruling in the case of Warren v. Federal Land Bank, 157 Ga. 465 (122 S. E. 40), where it was held: “The deed of an insane person, though made without fraud and for an adequate consideration, may be avoided by his heirs, not only as against his immediate grantee but also as against bona fide purchasers for value and without notice of such insanity. ‘The fairness of the defendant’s conduct cannot supply the plaintiff’s want of capacity.’ And ‘A person whose mind is so unsound as not to have capacity to contract is incapable of making a binding conveyance.’ ”
6. The court charged the jury in part as follows: “If you find that the
7. The charge complained of in the 10th ground of the motion for new trial was not error for any reason assigned.
8. Error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “I charge you this further, that where a party has once been shown to be insane, the presumption of law is that she remains insane. This is only a presumption and may be rebutted by proof to the contrary, showing she has become sane since she was adjudged insane.” This charge is substantially correct.
9. There were two other exceptions to the charge, but neither of them shows error hurtful to the movant.
10. The court did not err in excluding from evidence the certified copy of the letters of guardianship issued from the court of ordinary and the judgment of the court of ordinary adjudging the defendant in the proceedings to be a lunatic, without an exemplification of the proceedings upon which they were based, or evidence of their existence or loss. The judgment was necessarily relied upon as establishing a particular state of facts of which it was the judicial result; and in such a case it was not admissible without an authenticated copy of the proceedings in which it was rendered, or, as said above, proof of the prior existence of the same and their loss. Gibson v. Robinson, 90 Ga. 756 (16 S. E. 969, 35 Am. St. R. 250); Weaver v. Tuten, 138 Ga. 101 (74 S. E. 835).
(a) Parol evidence was offered to show prior existence and loss of the proceedings upon which the judgment was based, and the court erred in repelling this evidence. If the law required these proceedings to be recorded, it might be that á duly authenticated copy of the proceedings would be prerequisite to the introduction of the judgment, and, if they had been lost, it might be necessary to establish them; but the law does not require the record of the proceedings referred to. Verdery v. Savannah etc. Ry. Co., 82 Ga. 675 (9 S. E. 1133).
11. As the judgment is reversed and the case remanded for another trial, no opinion is expressed as to the issues of fact made by the evidence, nor as to the weight of the evidence. Judgment reversed.