On January 17, 1934, Mrs. Birdie O’Callaghan filed in the superior court of Dodge County a suit against the Bank of Eastman to recover sums of money collected by the bank on notes alleged to have been delivered to the bank as security for a debt of her husband. The defendant bank filed a demurrer based upon general grounds and also upon the specific ground that the alleged cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. The trial judge held that the petition stated a cause of action, but sustained the ground of demurrer invoking the bar and dismissed the petition. To this judgment the plaintiff excepted by a bill of exceptions which was made returnable to the Supreme Court. The. bank, as defendant in error, moved a transfer to the Court of Appeals, upon the ground that the suit was an action at law and was not otherwise such a case as would fall within the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.
The petition, as amended, alleged the following facts: On July 11, 1927, the plaintiff’s husband was indebted to the bank in the sum of $11,000 or other large sum, with which the plaintiff had no connection. "Shortly prior to said date” the bank was demanding and urging payment or security; and on being informed by the plaintiff’s husband that he was unable to pay the debt and had no security to offer, the bank desired to know "whether or not petitioner had any liberty bоnds or security that could be put up against such indebtedness,” whereupon the husband debtor informed the bank of certain promissory notes held by the plaintiff against her brother, W. J. Daniel. ' Dpon receiving this information the bank suggested to the husband that he see whether or not the wife would be willing to put up these four notes' of $1000 eaсh and one note for $2666.66. The bank “then and there informed
The motion to trаnsfer the case to the Court of Appeals is denied. The only question for decision on this motion is whether the petition, as amended, made “an equity case” within the meaning of the constitutional provision relating to the jurisdiction of this court. Code of 1933, § 2-3005. All trusts are matters over which courts of equity may exercise jurisdiction in this State. Code of 1933, § 108-117; Wallace v. Mize, 153 Ga. 374 (3), 383 (
The petition showed upon its face that the cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations, and the ground of demurrer claiming such bar was properly sustained. As to the enforcement of an implied trust it has been held that the period of limitation is seven years. Stonecypher v. Coleman, 161 Ga. 403 (2b) (
Nor is the result different because of the allegations as to fraud and' duress. A trust will be implied “where from any fraud one person obtains the title to prоperty which rightly belongs to another.” Code of 1933, § 108-106(2). It is also true that duress is a species of fraud. But, to overlook in this connection the allegations that the title did not pass, the facts stated do not constitute such fraud or duress as would entitle the plaintiff to hold the bank as a trustee. It does not appear that the plаintiff was not a woman of normal mental faculties, and there is no averment that the facts were misrepresented. Hence there is nothing to show fraud. Nor would the facts that her husband was in the mercantile business and that the bank threatened to institute legal proceedings and “close him out” amount to duress within the meaning of the law, it nоt appearing that the bank was about to proceed unlawfully for that purpose. Perryman v. Pope, 94 Ga. 672 (
Judgment affirmed.
