185 Ga. 121 | Ga. | 1937
The entire argument contained in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error is made in support of the one contention that the plaintiff in the lower court can not join J. EL McVeigh in her action against Norman S. McVeigh, because the relation of debtor and creditor does not exist between Norman S. McVeigh and Mrs. Harrison until her claim against him has been reduced to judgment.
The rulings in the first two headnotes do not require elaboration.
In Westmoreland v. Powell, 59 Ga. 256, appeared the following: “Willis Westmoreland committed a trespass upon the person of Powell. Powell sued him, and shortly thereafter Willis Westmoreland conveyed his house and lot in Atlanta to John G. Westmoreland for the benefit of his wife and children. The result of Powell’s suit was a recovery of some two or three thousand dollars, the fi. fa. for which sum of money was levied upon the house and lot, which John Westmoreland claimed as trustee; and the question was, is it subject? The jury found it not subject under the charge of the court; whereupon Powell moved for a new trial, which was granted, and Westmoreland, the claimant, excepted.
"1, 2. The main question is, whether the voluntary conveyance by Willis Westmoreland to his family was void as against Powell, if he was insolvent at the time, or if it was intended by him to delay or defraud Powell, the court having charged the jury that Powell’s claim on Westmoreland was not as a creditor and had little to do with the case, and having afterwards granted a new trial mainly, we suppose, on this ground, though also, perhaps, on the further ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. On this latter point the record is silent, the judge having granted the new trial generally. We express no opinion on the weight of the evidence. The question turns in part on the proper construction of the Code, sections 1952 and 1944. Both sections occur in the same title of the Code and in the same
In the case just cited it was held: “1.- Sections 1944 and 1952, in the same chapter of the Code,- should be construed together, and, construing them together, section 1952 does not contract or limit the statute (13 Elizabeth) against fraudulent conveyances by leaving out the words ‘ and others ’ after ‘ creditors;’ but, in the sense of that section (1952), aided by 1944, the relation of debtor and creditor would seem to exist so far as to make conveyances fraudulent as against the injured party, if so in other respects, whenever ‘ one person is liable and bound by law to pay another an amount of money, certain or uncertain.’ 2. A conveyance, therefore, if fraudulent against a creditor, in the ordinary legal sense of that word, would seem to be fraudulent, also, against any person who had, at the time of the conveyance, a valid, subsisting claim for damages for a trespass upon his person or property, committed by the party making such conveyance.”
In Banks v. McCandless, 119 Ga. 793 (47 S. E. 332), Buck, was one of two sureties on a bail-bond given by Conley in a trover
In Howard v. Long, 142 Ga. 789 (83 S. E. 852), Howard brought an action against Long and others, as organizers of a corporation who had transacted business in its name before the minimum stock was subscribed for, his claim being based on an alleged tort. The trial court dismissed the petition on demurrer, and a majority of this court affirmed the judgment, holding: “The cause of action given to creditors under the Civil Code (1910), § 2220, against persons who organize a company and transact business in its name before the minimum capital stock has been subscribed, does not include an action by one whose claim or demand against the corporation is ex delicto and does not spring from contract, express or implied.” In the opinion it was said: “The argument is advanced, that, inasmuch as this court has decided that the statute of 13th Elizabeth, against fraudulent conveyances, as codified in section 1952 of the Code of 1873, is broad enough to embrace tort-feasors in its provisions, the statute under consideration should receive a no less comprehensive interpretation. The statute of 13th Elizabeth, as so codified, declared that certain specified acts by debtors e shall be fraudulent in law against creditors, and as to them null and void.’ It is true that this court held that a conveyance, if fraudulent as against a creditor in the ordinary sense of that word, would seem to be fraudulent also as against any persons who had at the time of the conveyance a valid and subsisting claim of damages for trespass upon his person or property, committed by the party making the transfer. The court reached its conclusion, however, not upon an independent interpretation of the section of the Code of 1873, but construed that section in connection with the original statute of the 13th Elizabeth, which was declared to be still of force in Georgia in so far as it embraced tortfeasors in its provisions. Westmoreland v. Powell, 59 Ga. 256. In the Code of 1895 (§ 2695), and in the present Code of 1910, § 3224, the codifiers have added, after the word c creditors/ the words ‘ and others/ so as to definitely bring the provisions against transfers by fraudulent debtors within the old English statute.
In 15 C. J. 1374-5, § 3, under the subject “Creditor” it is stated: “The term ‘ Creditor ’ has been held sufficiently comprehensive to include those holding claims arising out of tort; persons entitled to damages for torts — being broadly construed in furtherance of the purposes of remedial statutes. When used in this sense the term includes not only the holder of a certain and fixed present debt, but every one having 'a right to damages capable of judicial enforcement, whether growing out of tort or contract; . . any person having a claim or demand upon which a judgment for a sum of money, or directing the payment of money, can be recovered in an action. . . Thus one against whom slanderous words are uttered is, in legal contemplation, a creditor from the time of their utterance.” In support of the proposition stated in the last sentence quoted the case of Banks v. McCandless, supra, is cited, with cases from other jurisdictions. One having a claim for damages against another by reason of the commission of a tort by the
From the rulings in the authorities cited above, particularly the Westmoreland decision, we think it to be the law of Georgia, and so hold, that the mother of a minor child killed by the negligent tortious acts of another person is within the protection of the Code, § 28-201, and may proceed in one action against the tortfeasor and the grantee named in conveyances executed by the tortfeasor, to obtain (1) a judgment for damages against the tortfeasor for the negligent tortious homicide of her child, and (2) a decree adjudging null and void-as to her conveyances of real