103 Ga. 631 | Ga. | 1898
Where a conveyance is attacked for fraud, any evidence tending to show fraud upon the part of the grantor is admissible, and we do not see why the contrary proposition is not true, i. e., that where the grantor and grantee claim that the transaction was bona fide and not made for the purpose of defrauding or delaying creditors, any evidence tending to show the bona fides of the transaction is likewise admissible. The force and effect of such evidence would be for the jury to determine. Here, the claimant proposed to show that, prior to the time of the creation of the debt which is sought to be enforced against the land, he recognized the validity of his wife’s claim, and bona fide made her a verbal gift of the land. Of course, such a gift is not in law a transfer of the title from him to his wifer because the law requires the transfer of title to land to be in writing; but would not such a transaction tend to show that he had waived his marital rights to the property and recognized it as his wife’s, and that he had sought to repay her by this gift of the land ? It seems to us that such testimony would have some probative force in the trial of such an issue. If the jury should find from this and other testimony that this attempted conveyance of the land was a real and bona fide transaction between the husband and the wife, and that it was subsequently consummated by a written instrument, they would be authorized to find in favor of the claimant although the written title was made after the suit upon the note had been filed. We think, therefore, that the court erred in excluding this evidence.
Judgment reversed.