Thе rights of the parties to a contract made and to be performed in another State are controlled not only by its pertinent statutes but by the decisions of its appellate courts construing and applying those statutes. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.
v.
Yates,
In this equitable petition by a mortgagee of land, to obtain a deficiency judgment against a purchaser of the land from the mortgagor, where the deed frоm the mortgagor to the purchaser contained a provision that the purchaser assumed the mortgage debt as part payment of the consideration, it was expressly pleaded thаt Florida, the State of the contract and location of the land, *177 had by statute adopted the common law of England, and that such common law was controlling as to this transaction. It was also pleaded that it was and is such common law as construed in Florida that a grantee who purchases mortgaged land from the mortgagor, under a provision in the deed assuming the mortgage, becоmes liable to the mortgagee as effectually as though he himself signed the deed, and becomes thus liable in a separate suit by the mortgagee as to any deficiency after a foreсlosure sale of the mortgaged premises. Accordingly, since only the rules of the common law, as adopted and construed in Florida, were thus pleaded as governing the transaction, the dеcisions of Georgia will prevail with reference thereto.
The defendant grantee contends that there are Georgia decisions construing the common law, and holding that a mere aсceptance by the grantee of a deed, with a recital that the grantee assumes a previous mortgage, will not render the grantee liable to the mortgagee unless the grantee аlso enters into possession of the land; and that, in the absence of any averment as to an entry, the petition was subject to general demurrer. The Code, § 29-102, declares that “When a granteе accepts a deed and enters thereunder, he will be bound by the covenants contained therein, although the deed has not been signed by him.” Before the codification of that provision, this court, in
Georgia Southern Railroad
v.
Reeves,
64
Ga.
492, held that “Where the grantor . . conveyed to a company, its successors or assigns forever, in fee simple [a] right of way through his land, and added in the deed” a provision requiring that a depot bе built for the benefit of the grantor and use by the railroad, “the grantee, by accepting such deed, entered into a covenant to comply with its terms, and this covenant ran with the land and became obligatory upon any second company which became the purchaser” of the property. Only the facts in that case showed an entry by the grantee. A consideration of the Codе section and of that decision came before this court in
Alropa Corporation
v.
Pomerance,
190
Ga.
1, 6 (
While there appears to be a variance in case and text аuthority as to whether a mere acceptance by the grantee of a deed, reciting his assumption of a mortgage, will render him liable to the mortgagee, not only the unqualified rule as statеd by this court in
Georgia Southern Railroad
v.
Reeves,
supra, but the weight
*179
of general authority, seems to accord with the leading Florida decision, Brownson
v.
Hannah,
Where, as under the common law, a grantee accepts a deed, and thereby, without the necessity of an entry, becomes bound by the covenants therein, and the instrument is under seal, the period of limitation, as in a case of both entry and acceptanсe under the statute, in a suit for a breach of the covenant, is twenty years.
Skeen
v.
Glower,
174
Ga.
510 (
Where, as a part of the transaction in the conveyance of
*180
proрerty, the purchaser assumes or agrees to pay debts of the vendor, and the vendor fully performs his obligation in the transaction by making a transfer of valuable property, which was the considеration for the promise, such a transaction does not fall within the statute of frauds, but within an exception thereto, the part performance rendering it a fraud if equitable relief be not grantеd.
First National Bank
v.
Rountree,
173
Ga.
117 (2), 120 (
Under the preceding holdings, the court did not err in overruling the demurrer on all grounds.
Judgment affirmed.
