42 Ga. App. 63 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1930
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. The defendant claims the right to rescind the contract because of the alleged breach by the seller of what the defendant contends were covenants to make certain improvements, alleging that the contract was intended to be performed in the State of
Since it does not appear that the written agreement contained any covenant by the vendor to make improvements, the answer discloses no breach of covenant upon that subject and the claim for redress upon such ground must necessarily fail. Of course, in the absence of fraud the defendant could not go beyond the writing and rely upon a verbal agreement upon the part of the seller to make the improvements. Civil Code (1910), § 5788.
2. The defendant also attempted to allege fraud in various particulars, but as to this matter she is precluded by the following stipulation contained in the agreement: “The undersigned has read and understands the whole of the above contract, and now states and in consideration of the contract agrees that no representation, promise or agreement not expressed in this contract has been made to induce the undersigned to enter into it.” While this
This is to treat the answer as disclosing an attempt to plead rescission for fraud, but as a matter of fact the more reasonable construction is that the right of rescission is claimed only for the breach of alleged covenants, since the only references to this subject are in paragraphs 6, 11, and 13, and in each instance the defendant speaks of rescission in such connection as to imply its assertion only because of such a breach. Upon this phase, nothing need be added to what is said in the first division, except to say that the writing contained no agreement or warranty that the property was located in a park. In sales of personalty words of description may import a warranty. Americus Grocery Co. v. Brackett, 119 Ga. 489 (1, 2) (46 S. E. 657). Whethep the same may also be true in sales of realty, it is apparent in the instant case that the. words, " Croissant Park,” were intended only as the name of the section or subdivision in which the property was situated.
3. We will next consider the question of the plaintiff’s right
Although the defendant alleged that the contract was one to be performed in the State of Florida, and that “all covenants in said contract under the Florida [laws ?] are dependent, covenants and a breach of which gives either party a right to rescind said contract,” she pleaded no law of the foreign state on the right to recover attorney’s fees, and the question as to what is the Florida law as to this matter can be determined only by a resort to presumptions.
If, notwithstanding the fact that Florida is not of the territory of the original colonies, we should still presume that the common law is of force in that state, then the contract for attorney’s fees appears to be legal, since there was no objection to such a contract at common law. Merck v. American Freehold Land Mortgage Co., 79 Ga. 213 (3) (7 S. E. 265); National Bank of Athens v. Danforth, 80 Ga. 55 (8) (7 S. E. 546); Demere v. Germania Bank, 116 Ga. 317 (42 S. E. 488); Oliver Typewriter Co. v. Fielder, 7 Ga. App. 525 (67 S. E. 210). The Georgia statute upon the subject (Civil Code of 1910, § 4252) is not the origin of all right to recover attorney’s fees in this State; that is to say, it does not give a right where none existed at common law; on the other hand, it merely restricted a right which the common law recognized. Compare Security Mortgage Co. v. Powers, 278 U. S. 149 (49 Sup. 84, 73 L. ed. 236).
If we may not presume that the common law is of force in
This conclusion is not in conflict with Brooks v. Boyd, 1 Ga. App. 65 (7) (57 S. E. 1093), since the plea in that ease made an issue as to whether the fees were recoverable at all under the laws of the foreign state.
4, 5. From what has been said above none of the allegations of the answer were sufficient to set forth a defense unless there was substance in paragraphs 4 and 12. As to this the case is controlled by Reliance Realty Co. v. Mitchell, 41 Ga. App. 124 (2) (152 S. E. 295). The allegations in the petition that the seller <efaithfully performed every obligation by said contract imposed upon it,” and that the plaintiff assignee “now stands ready, able and willing to convey to said Miss Elizabeth Keating the property described in said contract in fee simple in accordance with the terms of said contract,” were, in view of the petition as a whole, necessary to the statement of a cause of action, and the defendant’s denial of these allegations was sufficient to put the plaintiff upon proof and, thus, to save the answer from dismissal on general demurrer.
If, in point of practice, it had been incumbent upon the defendant to allege affirmatively that the plaintiff was not ready, able and willing to convey the property in accordance with the contract, the special demurrer to the defendant’s paragraph 12, upon the ground that it merely stated a conclusion, might perhaps have been well taken; but since the burden rested upon the plaintiff as to the matters referred to in this paragraph, and since the answer had sufficiently denied the plaintiff’s averments in regard to the same matter, the court should not have stricken the allegations of paragraph 12 merely for a want of particularity. See, in this connection, Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Reed, 33 Ga. App. 396 (2) (126 S. E. 393), and especially the remarks on page 400.
Under the rulings in Reliance Realty Co. v. Mitchell, supra, the defendant’s denial of the allegations of plaintiff’s paragraph 4 was .a sufficient statement of a defense, and it was therefore error to sustain the general demurrer and to strike the answer .as a whole.
Judgment reversed.