82 Ga. 552 | Ga. | 1889
Owen Eoley died in the year 1855, testate, leaving a large estate which he directed in his will should be equally divided between his wife, and his two children, Catherine and Erancis O. Eoley. Two executors were named in the will, who qualified, and in 1873 either resigned or were discharged. Honoria Eoley, the widow, was appointed administratrix with the will annexed, and took charge of the property. After the son, Erancis O., attained his majority, he sold his interest in the estate to his mother and sister. Several years subsequent to that sale, he died, leaving a widow and one child. This widow intermarried with one Martin, who took out letters of .administration on the estate of Erancis O. Eoley, and as such administrator, filed this bill against Honoria Eoley, the mother of his intestate, for an accounting and settlement of said estate, and to set aside the deed made by Erancis O. Eoley to his mother and sister, on the grounds of fraud in the procurement of the same, undue influence exercised over the mind of the son and brother by the mother and sister, and gross inadequacy of consideration. On the trial of the case, the jury found against the complainant in the bill, and he moved for a new triál on many grounds; which motion was refused by the court, and he excepted.
While there are many grounds in this motion for a new trial, counsel for plaintiff in error only insisted upon two of these grounds before us, either in his brief or in his oral argument to the 'court, for a reversal of the judgment of the court below. It is therefore unnecessary for us to notice the other grounds taken in the motion, further than to say that the plaintiff in error has not shown to us the errors complained of therein. The grounds insisted on here are, (1) that the jury found contrary to the evidence, in answering special questions
“Francis O. Foley, the complainant’s intestate, did sell and convey his interest in his father’s estate devised to him in his father’s will, to the defendant his mother, and his sister Catherine Foley, on the sixteenth day of September, 1873; that there was no fraud or concealment or misrepresentation of any material facts made wilfully or recklessly to deceive, or without knowledge by defendant or Catherine Foley, to said F. O. Foley, in making said contract of sale; that there was no suppression of any fact material to be known, which the defendant was under an obligation' as administratix or parent to communicate to Francis O. Foley, in reference to the property in question; that the defendant, as the mother of Francis O. Foley, or Catherine Foley as his sister, did not exercise a controlling influence over the will, conduct and interest of Francis O. Foley, in procuring any sale to be made by him to her of his interest in his father’s estate; that the deed was made by Francis O. Foley to his mother, the defendant, and his sister, freely, voluntarily and without the slightest persuasion or influence towards this object by them; that thé deed was made upon a fair and adequate consideration, joined with an equality of mental ability, and that the consideration named in said deed was paid; that Francis O. Foley was acquainted with the nature, value and profits arising from the estate of his father, or had full and ample opportunity to inform himself of the*555 same; that the estate of Owen Foley was distributed to the parties entitled thereto i-n the lifetime of Francis O. Foley, to wit, on the 15th of March, 1877; that at the time of making the deed to his mother (the defendant) and his sister, Francis O. Foley was in a fit condition to manage his own business and to make a contract disposing of his own interest in said estate to his own advantage.”
Judgment affirmed.