90 Ga. 377 | Ga. | 1892
A second trial of this case, in pursuance of the decision of this court in 82 Ga. 354, resulted in a verdict-for the defendant; and to a judgment overruling plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, they excepted on several grounds.
1. The court admitted in evidence an exemplified copy of a bill hied by the present plaintiffs and others-in Bibb superior court against C. T. Ward, seeking to recover certain land which they claimed had been purchased with proceeds of the sale of some of the property included in the trust, which trust covered the property now in dispute. The bill was not signed nor sworn to by the complainants therein, but bore only the-signature of their solicitor. The relevancy of the evidence is not questioned, but it is alleged that its admission was error because it contained merely the “suggestions of counsel.” Professor G-reenleaf, in his excellent treatise on evidence (vol. Ill, §274) advises
The two cases relied upon by plaintiffs do not conflict with this ruling. In Sciple v. Northcutt, 62 Ga. 42, the question was whether a sworn bill could be introduced without an amendment which had been made; and in Carr v. Emory College, 32 Ga. 557, it was ruled, not that a bill was inadmissible as containing admissions, but that the entire record of another case, under the facts, was not admissible to show an estoppel.
2. The court having properly admitted in evidence the bill just referred to, the plaintiffs sought to escape the effect of the admissions contained therein by introducing, over defendant’s objection, a. certificate from the clerk of the court in which it was filed, to show that it had been dismissed. This certificate stated this case and another by name, and added, “the above stated cases have been duly dismissed, as appears from the
3. Over plaintiffs’ objection, a witness for defendant was permitted to testify that at the time of certain pnr-chases of land, she was too young to know from whom it was bought or the source of the purchase money, but •that at the time of testifying, she knew that the mouey -came from a specified fund. The objection was, that this testimony was hearsay, and we think the objection well founded. The testimony shows intrinsically that her present knowledge, as she designates it, is not her personal knowledge of the fact to which she testifies, but that she is asserting her belief of the facts, produced 'by hearsay or otherwise. She does not explain how or from what source her “knowledge” at the time she testified was derived so that she could then know, in the legal sense of the term, that which she'says she was -.too young to know at the time of the occurrence. It
4. The position of the plaintiffs below was, that their title in remainder to the land in controversy never having been legally divested, they must necessarily recover. The defendant insisted that though the sale to him by John Lamar, as trustee, did not pass the legal title as against these plaintiffs, his title had become valid and finding on them by ratification. In support of this contention, it was, among other things, urged that after bringing suit against Pearre to assert their title in remainder and to recover the premises from him, the plaintiffs, pending this suit, had filed a bill against one Ward, who had purchased from the life-tenant, before her death, certain property in Yineville, in which bill they claimed that the property last mentioned was bought with funds arising from the sale by the trustee of some or all of the original trust property, and for this reason they were entitled to recover from Ward the property he had so purchased. In this connection it was argued that the evidence showed the. trustee had used money received by him from the defendant for the land now in dispute in buying the Yineville property, and that, consequently, the filing of the bill amounted to such a ratification of the trustee’s conduct as would conclusively estop the plaintiffs from further proceeding with their suit against the defendant. Even if the facts were as stated, and the plaintiffs so knew, we do not think the mere fact of filing this bill would defeat them in the action first brought, if otherwise entitled to re
In the case at bar, it may be that the plaintiffs, by abandoning their action against Pearre, could have properly sued for property bought with the proceeds of the land sold to him, because, notwithstanding the bringing of the suit against him, it might still have been in their power to dismiss it and ratify the sale by the trustee; but it is quite certain, in view of the above authorities, they could not successfully sue for the Vine-ville property while the action against Pearre was still
At the last trial, the plaintiffs, as already seen, introduced a certificate of the clerk, for the purpose of showing that the bill had been dismissed, but the evidence in this form was not legally admissible. If the plaintiffs should be able to prove by proper evidence that the bill was voluntarily dismissed before any adjudication or decree was had upon its merits, would the mere fact of having filed it be anything more than a very solemn admission of facts tending to show they had ratified the sale to Pearre, and therefore really had no cause of action against him ? This, in our opinion, is what it would amount to, and such an admission, though made in judíelo, is not absolutely and forever conclusive against the parties making it. It would at last, under proper instruction's from the court, be a question for the jury, taking into consideration the fact that the plaintiffs had already sued Pearre, and all the other attendant facts and circumstances, to decide whether or not the admission, so made, signified an intention to ratify the sale to Pearre by the trustee.
The questiou under consideration has been discussed thus far on the assumption that the Yineville property was actually paid for with money derived from the sale to Pearre, but, in point of fact, this was, on the trial, a disputed question upon which evidence was introduced on both sides. The bill itself does not distinctly allege that the money received by the trustee from Pearre did
Without intending to qualify what is ruled in the
5. Again, it was contended for the defendant that, according to a decided preponderance of the evidence, the trustee invested some of the money he had received from Pearre in certain lands in Baker county, and that the remaindermen, including the present plaintiffs, after the death of Mrs. Lamar, the life-tenant, with a full knowledge of all the material facts, appropriated these lands to their own use, sold them and divided the proceeds among themselves, and thus ratified the sale and conveyance by the trustee to Pearre of their estate in remainder in the land now in dispute. If-all these things are true, it was a complete ratification of the sale to Pearre, and does estop the plaintiffs from recovering the land from him. Certainly they could not knowingly' and deliberately accept, use and enjoy property his money paid for, and then say the transactions by virtue of which the trustee received and invested that money were not binding on them. Neither equity nor good conscience would permit them to repudiate these transactions, and at the same time take therefrom substantial benefits. The plaintiffs denied the truth of the defendant’s contention as to these matters, and we do not express any opinion as to the merits of the controversy thus arising, hut will leave the same to be determined by the jury when the case is tried again. If
6. By cross-bill of exceptions, the defendant in error to the main bill complained that the court erred in refusing to allow him to prove by two witnesses admissions made by the deceased, Mrs. Lamar, while in possession of the Baker county lands and holding the same as apparent owner, to the effect that they were purchased with the proceeds of the sale of the land now in dispute, and were trust property standing in lieu thereof. Under the rule laid down in section 3776 of the code, this evidence should have been admitted. In Queen v. Birmingham, 1 B. & S. 163, Lord Cockburn says, “as soon as it is established, which it now is on the authority of Higham v. Ridgway [10 East, 109] and
Jndgment reversed on both bills of exceptions.