186 Ga. 549 | Ga. | 1938
In December, 1931, Mrs. Annie C. Monk instituted against John F. Holden an action to recover land, and for cancellation. On May 23, 1932, the defendant filed a general and special demurrer. At the August term, 1937, the defendant having died, his executor, Frank A. Holden, was made a party defendant in his stead. During the same term the plaintiff offered an amendment to her petition, which was allowed subject to demurrer. The executor then renewed the demurrer filed by the original defendant, and demurred generally and specially to the amendment and to the petition as amended. The court sustained several of the grounds of demurrer to the amendment, striking the amendment in its entirety. The court also sustained the original general demurrer and dismissed the action. To these rulings the plaintiff excepted.
Whether or not the amendment was subject to the particular grounds of demurrer urged by the executor, it is our opinion that the petition as amended was insufficient to state a cause of action, and that the judgment of dismissal should be affirmed. The petition contained substantially the following allegations:
John F. Holden is in possession of four described tracts of land situated in the County of Taliaferro, containing in the aggregate about 520 acres. The “petitioner is the owner and claims title to the said land, and avers that said Holden has no claim, rightfully, on said land. . . The said land is and has been for many years the property of petitioner, without any rightful claim whatsoever of the said Holden upon said land, though said Holden has in his possession certain papers and claims of title, which are invalid, as will hereinafter be shown. Hereto attached is a statement of the transactions upon which said Holden claims title to said land. The first transaction is a mortgage from petitioner to said Holden for the sum of $1200, and was given for indebtedness which said
“All of said papers or claims, omitting the first transaction, were executed by petitioner under duress, for the reason that A. M. Bobinson Co., of Atlanta, Georgia, were threatening to prosecute said husband, asserting that said husband had delivered to it, A. M. Bobinson Co., a statement for credit which was fraudulent,
The petition contained prayers for cancellation of “all of said papers,” for recovery of the land described, and for general relief. Attached to the petition was the following abstract of the several transactions enumerated therein: First: Mrs. Annie O. Monk to Bank of Crawfórdville; mortgage, dated Feb. 25, 1921, recorded Jan. 20, 1922. Second: Mrs. Annie C. Monk to Bank of Taliaferro; deed, dated May 25, 1922, recorded May 26, 1922. Third: Mrs. Annie C. Monk to Bank of Crawfórdville; deed, dated May 25, 1922, recorded May 29, 1922. Fourth: Mrs. Annie C. Monk to Bank of Taliaferro; mortgage dated Dec. 4, 1924, recorded Dec. 15, 1924. Fifth: Mrs. Annie C. Monk to Bank of Taliaferro; mortgage, dated Dec. 4, 1924, recorded Dec. 24, 1924. Sixth1: Mrs. Annie C. Monk to John F. Holden; deed, dated Dec. 14, 1925, recorded Dec. 24, 1925.
It will be noticed that there were only three original transactions, the fourth and fifth being renewals, and the sixth being a deed “for the purpose of merging all of the indebtedness as set forth above and securing the said Holden for the sum of $5600,” Holden having represented to the plaintiff that he had become the owner of all of the “claims and indebtedness represented by the foregoing transactions.”
The amendment to the petition was as follows: “Petitioner avers that defendant has no fee-simple title to said land; that the sixth transaction referred to in the petition is the only claim of title that defendant has to said land as a basis, and that the same is a security deed. . . [It] was delivered to said Holden with
It appears from the petition and the exhibit that in 1921 the husband of the plaintiff was indebted to John F. Holden in the sum of $1200, for which the husband had executed to him a mortgage of some kind. For the purpose of paying this debt of the husband, the plaintiff borrowed from the Bank of Crawford-ville a sum of money, securing the indebtedness to the bank by a mortgage on one of the tracts of land described in the petition. In 1922 the husband was indebted to A. M. Bobinson Company. This company was about to prosecute him upon a charge of making a fraudulent statement for the purpose of obtaining credit. In these circumstances the plaintiff borrowed from the Bank of Taliaferro the sum of $1500 to be applied on the debt to A. M. Bobinson Company, securing the loan thus obtained from the Bank of Taliaferro by a deed conveying other real estate owned by hex. To liquidate this loan and to pay other debts of her husband, including attorney’s fees and “advance interest, to the Bank of Taliaferro,” the plaintiff borrowed again from the Bank of Crawford-ville, the loan in this instance amounting to $2500, and being secured by a deed to additional real estate. It was by these three transactions that the plaintiff’s property became originally involved as security for debts of her husband. According to the petition, the fourth transaction was a renewal, and the fifth was also a renewal with additional security. The sixth transaction consisted of a deed to John F. Holden, executed “for the purpose of merging all the indebtedness,” of which John F. Holden had then become the owner and which at that time amounted to $5600.
“A married woman may borrow money for the purpose of paying debts of her husband, and give her note and mortgage there-.
The petition further alleged, however, that the “papers” for the second and third loans were executed by the plaintiff because of fear that her husband would be arrested and imprisoned at the instance of the A. M. Eobinson Company, one of the creditors of her husband, to be paid from these loans; and also that Holden as an official of both banks had knowledge of these facts. Whether or not these averments were sufficient to show that these loans were invalid at the time made (Mallory v. Royston Bank, 135 Ga. 702, 70 S. E. 586; Lichtenstein v. Wilensky, 151 Ga. 353, 107 S. E. 49; Keller v. Levison, 165 Ga. 178, 140 S. E. 493; Hawkes v. Mobley, 174 Ga. 481, 488, 163 S. E. 494; O’Callaghan v. Bank of Eastman, 180 Ga. 812, 819, 180 S. E. 847), yet, “Where the execution of a contract is procured by duress, the person executing it may, after removal of the duress, waive the duress and ratify the contract.” Augusta Motor Sales Co. v. King, 36 Ga. App. 541 (137 S. E. 102). Compare Strickland v. Parlin & Orendorf Co., 118 Ga. 213 (3) (44 S. E. 997); Carl S. Strickland Co. v. Union Banking Co., 42 Ga. App. 645 (6) (157 S. E. 115). These two loans were twice renewed by the plaintiff before they came into the hands of John F. Holden as owner, and still later the plaintiff executed to him a deed based upon such consideration. Accordingly, if the original loans should be considered as having been affected in any manner by duress, it appears from the petition that the plaintiff was under no restraint at the time- of recognizing and affirming them in the later transactions. Therefore the plaintiff has waived any possible ground of complaint on account of duress.
Even if the petition as amended may be construed as showing that the deed to Holden was a security deed (see Code, § 67-104), it appears that at the time this deed was executed in 1925 the debt amounted to $5600. To this sum interest should be added at the legal rate. At the time the plaintiff amended her petition in August, 1937, this debt with interest would have amounted to approximately $10,000. In the amendment the plaintiff claimed an accountability for only $5400 for rents and profits. If the plaintiff executed the deed to Holden and at the same time
Judgment affirmed.