80 Ga. 604 | Ga. | 1888
Popwell filed his bill in Wayne superior court against Sylvester Mumford, of Wayne county, and John C. Nicholls, of Pierce county; wherein- he alleged, in substance, that he had purchased a certain tract or tracts of land from the respondents, for the sum of $850 ; that he was to pay in cash $700, and to pay $150 when Nicholls should make him a warranty .deed to his half-interest in the land, and Mumford a quit-claim deed for his half interest; that.he paid the $700 in cash to Mumford, to whom Nicholls had sent him, telling him that any trade or arrangement he made with Mumford would be satisfactory to him (Nicholls); that Nicholls and Mumford owned the land jointly; and that when he paid the money he got a receipt for the same, signed “ Nicholls & Mumford,” each one of them taking half of the money; that Nicholls and Mumford refused to comply with their part of the contract, pretending that they had only sold him the Palmer place, which contained only 330 acres ; whereas in truth and in fact, they had sold him not only the Palmer place, but the adjoining lands thereto, containing a thousand acres more or less. He therefore filed this bill, asking a decree for specific performance, compelling the respondents to make him a deed or deeds in accordance with their contract, and tendering in his bill the balance of the purchase money. Nicholls demurred to the bill, upon the grounds: (1) that he did not reside in Wayne county but in Pierce county, and that therefore the court had no jurisdiction as to him ; and (2) because said contract was too uncertain
Mumford in his answer admits receiving the money as charged by the complainant, but denies that he ever made any contract of sale with him as set out in his bill. He alleges that the complainant represented to him that he had made said contract with Nicholls, the respondents’ co-tenant, and in giving the receipt for the money, he acted solely on the representations made to him by the complainant, to the eifect that he had purchased the lands adjoining the Palmer place, with said place, from said Nicholls ; that he knew nothing of the boundaries of the land, as described in the complainant’s bill, because the deeds were in the possession of his co-tenant, Nicholls, and that he would not have sold-' all of that land for $850-, and intended only to sell the Palmer place, 330 acres; that he informed the complainant that he would not sell said lands for less than $1,500 ; that the Palmer place was itself worth the $850, and that he was willing to make a deed to that place according to his contract, when the balance of the purchase money was paid.
¥/hen the case came on for trial in the court below, the demurrer of Nicholls was overruled by the court; whereupon he filed his bill of exceptions pendente lite. Upon
The main points in the motion for a new trial argued before us were: (1) that the court erred in overruling the demurrer of the respondent, Nicholls, to the bill; and (2) that the verdict was contrary to law and to the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.