40 S.E.2d 537 | Ga. | 1946
1. In a suit for specific performance of a parol contract for the purchase of land, where the evidence and the admissions of the defendant sellers showed that the contract was made as alleged, that the purchase-money has been paid, and that the purchaser took possession and made valuable improvements on the land, the verdict in favor of the petitioner was authorized by the evidence.
(a) Evidence introduced by the defendant who was not the seller, which might have been sufficient to have authorized a finding that she made the contract of purchase, paid most of the purchase-money, made valuable improvements on the land, and was entitled to have the property conveyed to her, did not render the verdict in favor of the petitioner invalid on the ground that it was without evidence to support it.
2. The provisions of the Code, § 38-1603, to the effect that where a suit is instituted or defended by a representative of a deceased person, the opposite party may not testify to transactions had with the deceased, did not render inadmissible testimony of the petitioner, who sued individually as sole heir of her deceased father and as administratrix of his estate, as to transactions that she had had with her father.
The defendant, Emma Lane, answered, alleging that she had lived with Roman Brown for a period of approximately eighteen years, but had not been married to him. She was with him when the land in dispute was contracted for, and they both furnished part of the original $50 payment thereon. She had made all subsequent payments, had borne all expenses of erecting the improvements on the land, and was entitled to have title to the land, and she prayed that the court decree the title vested in her.
The other defendants answered, jointly admitting the contract between themselves and Roman Brown as alleged in the petition, and admitting that Roman Brown had paid the first $50 on the purchase-price and continued payments thereon until his death, but stating that the defendant, Emma Lane, had thereafter completed payment of the purchase-money. These defendants did not know who had supplied the money with which she made such payments. They admitted that the full purchase-price had been paid, and that under their contract they were obligated to convey the *618 land in question and were ready and willing to convey the same to the person entitled thereto.
Upon the trial the petitioner testified as follows: "My father's name was Roman Brown. He died June 18, 1944. His wife was dead when he died. She died in 1924. I don't have any brothers and sisters. I am the sole heir of my father. I have been appointed administratrix by the ordinary to handle his estate. The property involved in this case is located 1428 Ninth Avenue, outside the city limits. My father was working for several years before he died. He used to work for Mr. Hernley on the Milledgeville Road, and earned $20 per week working there. This particular lot was purchased August 19, 1943. I helped to pay for this lot. I gave $5 a week. I started giving that money in August of 1943 and went until May, 1944. He died June 18, 1944. I gave $66 after he died. I got $132 from the Social Security and gave the $66 from that money. I gave the money to Emma Lane, the defendant in this case, and I told her to put it on the house and finish paying for it. She received other money from insurance in the Metropolitan Insurance Company. This amount was $265. She also received $75 from the Bankers Insurance Company. Emma Lane worked, working at one place around hereto the Presbyterian Church. Ever now and then is all I know of here having a regular job. I don't know whether she worked six days a week or five days a week. I don't know what she got paid. Roman Brown made the statement to me that this lot was going to cost of $200. He told me he was buying the lot because he knowed he was going to get old and disabled to work, and he would have a home to live in. As to the agreement we had about the money I was paying him, he said he was going to build a room on there for me to live with him. I went to live in the house in May, 1944, and lived with him until he died, and then I left. Nobody made it unpleasant for me there. I just didn't like to live there and didn't want to. My father was sick for one month and three weeks before he died June 18, 1944. He bought this lot as I have testified in August, 1943. I moved out of the house in June. The house wasn't built at the time he bought it. He didn't do the carpenter work and the masonry work on it. He had the mens to do the work. Ben Marshall is the one who built the house. The brick mason was Eddie Robinson. There was no electrician. The house *619 wasn't wired when he died. Mr. Rosier didn't do the work there. As to where the lumber came from, he said he bought some from Marshall. Marshall got some of the lumber for him. No, he didn't have a bank account. He worked for Mr. Hernley up there. Mr. Hernley was his employed for the past ten or fifteen years. He had no other job. Yes, he had an automobile. Yes, he was riding around in that automobile pretty regularly to work, and on Saturdays and Sundays, too. Yes, he drank some. During the last year or so he didn't work regularly. He was sick some days and didn't work. During that time Emma Lane, or Emma Brown, did work some. She went by the name of Emma Brown. Yes, she lived with my father for the past eighteen years. She had a son that was staying there in the house, too. He worked out at Camp Gordon. He used to be in the C. C. Camp. He didn't live in the new house my father built. He lived in the old house out at Babcock Wilcox. Emma Lane did not tell me she was married to Roman Brown. As to whether she told me she was married, she told me she was married to Ed Lynn. I went in the house to live in May, and my father died in June. Yes, I stayed in there about a month."
The witness for the petitioner, Cora Norman, testified as follows: "I live at 2052 Milledgeville Road. I know Emma Lane. I knew Roman Brown before he died. I was neighbors of these two. I have been knowing them a long time, ever since I moved there. Emma Lane worked sometimes, and took in washing and ironing sometimes. She didn't work regularly like a heap of women, but she worked washing and ironing. No, she never told me how much she was paid, and I didn't know how much. When I was working at the Presbyterian Church they was paying me $12 every two weeks. I don't know what they paid her. I knew about Roman Brown buying this piece of property. I was the one sold it to him. First I asked her, did she want to buy a lot, and she told me to see him, and I asked him and he decided to buy it, and he paid $50 down on the lot and I tried to sell him the one next to it, and he said, `No,' he wouldn't buy it because he wanted to build this house. After he built the house I spoke to him again, and he said he didn't want to buy it because he wanted to put his daughter a room on there and he wouldn't be able to buy the other lot."
The parties stipulated upon the trial that the sole issue was *620 whether the title should be made to the estate of Roman Brown or to Emma Lane, and that the verdict of the jury should be for one of the claimants.
The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the petitioner. The exception here is to the judgment overruling the defendants' amended motion for new trial.
1. The allegations and evidence made a proper case for specific performance and the other relief sought. Code, § 37-802;Simpson v. Fox,
2. The two special grounds of the motion for new trial except to rulings upon the trial which allowed the petitioner, while testifying as a witness in her own behalf, to relate conversations and transactions which she had had with her intestate, Roman Brown. The objection interposed was that she was a party to the case, and therefore incompetent to testify to any transactions with the deceased. The plaintiff in error cites in support of these grounds Code, § 38-1603; Killian v. Banks,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.