15 S.E.2d 442 | Ga. | 1941
1. The writ of error was not subject to dismissal on the ground that a single bill of exceptions did not lie on refusal of a new trial after verdicts in a single trial of two claims based on identical grounds and tried together as one. Cases distinguished.
2. An assignment of error on admission or exclusion of evidence presents nothing for adjudication where it does not set forth the evidence literally or substantially, or point it out in an attached exhibit.
3. Requested instructions were covered by charge as given.
4. Evidence held not sufficient to prove, with the degree of certainty required by the law as declared in previous decisions, a contract by one since deceased, on consideration that the plaintiffs would move into his house and take care of him during his lifetime, to execute his will and leave to the plaintiffs his house and lot.
The equitable amendment and the amendment thereto were both duly allowed. The administrator filed an answer to the equitable petition, and the answer was amended. Under the pleadings the parties were at issue as to the alleged parol contract. The case as thus presented was tried under a stipulation between the parties to try the claim cases together. There was no order of court expressly providing for consolidating the claim cases as originally docketed. The jury returned two identical verdicts "in favor of the claimant," which by instruction of the judge were entered respectively on each of the statutory claims. The administrator made two motions for a new trial, based on the general grounds. Afterwards, *315 treating the whole proceeding as one by Mrs. Salmon for both equitable and legal relief, the administrator presented two amendments of the motion for a new trial. A new trial was refused, and the administrator took a single bill of exceptions, assigning error on the refusal of a new trial.
Fred C. Salmon testified: "Mr. Grace was carrying insurance on his life at that time. He had a three-thousand-dollar policy with the Royal Arcanum, fraternal insurance. . . Now at that time Mr. and Mrs. Grace came to my house, and wanted me to pay this premium on the policy on account of finances, and we went to W. H. Coker and had him send the policy in, and had it changed, and they changed it and made one thousand dollars to my wife, Mrs. Bessie Salmon, and two thousand dollars to Mrs. W. I. Grace, Aunt Mollie, and I was to pay the premiums as long as he lived, and my wife was to get a check for one thousand dollars, and she was to get the other two thousand dollars, and at their death my wife was to have the estate, whatever it was, in cash or anything else. My wife, to carry out her contract, was to help look after them in their old age and see they were looked after. . . At the time this agreement was made and entered into, there were present Mr. and Mrs. Grace and W. H. Coker and myself. . . Now during that period of time, from 1925 up until his death, he and his wife were still living next door to my house. When this agreement was made that I spoke of, at Mr. Walt Coker's office, Mrs. Grace said that she wanted us to look after her and her business, and said we were to look after it as long as they lived, was the contract; we were to do it. Mrs. Salmon agreed to that. Mrs. Grace, in return for Mrs. Salmon agreeing to do the things I have just outlined, was to execute a will and leave everything she had, personal and real, to my wife. Mrs. Bessie Salmon, if I carried out this contract; and we did do these things we promised to do."
1. The equitable amendment extended to and was in aid of both the claims, thus converting the whole proceeding into one action for specific performance as essential to recovery of all the property described in both of the original claims. The allowance of the equitable amendment was in substance mere amendatory and enlargement of the original claims, and amounted to a conversion of the whole proceeding into one action at the instance of Mrs. Salmon, the claimant. While there were two identical verdicts and two motions *316
for new trial on the same grounds, they were in substance the same, and amounted to no more than one verdict and one motion for a new trial in a single case as made by the claims as amended by the claimant. The administrator, being the party adversely affected, had a right to complain in a single bill of exceptions of the judgment overruling his motion for new trial. Consequently the motion in the Supreme Court to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that there was no order of court consolidating the original claim cases, and that the plaintiff in error, on the state of the record, could not complain of the judgment refusing a new trial in a single bill of exceptions, is without merit. The case differs on its facts from Harris v. Gano,
2. "A ground of a motion for a new trial should be complete in itself, or rendered so by an exhibit to the motion. Accordingly, it has been repeatedly ruled that a ground based on the admission or rejection of evidence presents nothing for adjudication, when such evidence is not set forth therein either literally or in substance, nor attached as an exhibit to the motion." Shaw v.Jones,
3. In so far as any of the requests to charge stated correct principles of law applicable and properly adjusted to the pleadings and evidence, they were sufficiently covered by the general charge. *317
4. "Where an equitable petition is brought against the administrator and heirs at law of a decedent who is alleged in his lifetime to have entered into a parol contract with the plaintiffs (man and wife), whereby the decedent promised, upon consideration that the plaintiffs would move into his house and take care of him during his natural life, to execute his will and leave the house and lot to the plaintiffs, and a breach of the contract is alleged on the part of the decedent, and performance on the part of the plaintiffs, specific performance of the contract will be decreed, where the parol contract is established so clearly and satisfactorily by evidence as to leave no reasonable doubt on the minds of the jury as to the contract, and its performance on the part of the plaintiffs, and the breach thereof on the part of the decedent." Ellis v. Reagan,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur. *318