148 Ga. 81 | Ga. | 1918
Eigsby and others brought a petition against Eobertson, praying for a decree reforming a deed in which Eobertson was the grantor and Eigsby the grantee. Upon the trial the jury, under instructions of the court, returned a special verdict in answer to two questions submitted to them; and the court thereupon granted a decree that the deed be reformed as prayed. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
1. Eigsby was the holder of a bond for title from Eobertson, and subsequently became the grantee in a deed conveying the land described in the bond, with the exception of a small part thereof. Three or four years after the execution of the deed, Eigsby, as he
This was an equitable petition, and it was competent for the judge upon his own motion to submit questions to the jury covering the issues made, and then to frame a decree in accordance with the special verdict.
2. In another ground of the motion for a new trial error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “The burden is upon the plaintiffs to establish their'contentions by a preponderance of the evidence. What is meant by a preponderance of the evidence is the weight of it. It should be stronger going to show that the contentions of the plaintiffs are correct than it is going to show that the contentions of the defendant are correct. If it be but slightly so, that would be sufficient, but it must preponderate in favor of the plaintiffs to authorize them to recover.” The plaintiff in error contends that the rule stated in this charge as to the sufficiency of evidence is not applicable to cases brought for the reformation of deeds. It is true that generally such a charge as the one quoted, in a suit brought for the reformation of a written instrument, would not stand if properly challenged. For, as has been said, equity is very slow in exerting itself to reform alleged mistakes in deeds or other written instruments, and it is not sufficient that there may be some reason to presume a mistake; the evidence must be clear, unequivocal, and decisive. Civil Code, § 4570. See also collection of cases in 11 Miehie’s Dig. 150, under the head of “Sufficiency of Evidence.” But we are of the opinion that, in view of the sole issue involved in this case, the charge affords no ground of complaint to the plaintiff in error. The ease was not submitted to the jury generally, and did not involve the establishment of doubtful lines or the inclusion or exclusion of land the description of which was vague or doubtful; hut the issue to be determined by the jury was a single and a simple issue of fact, and that is, whether Eigsby “understood that the description in the deed was different from that in the bond for title.” This issue of fact relates to some agreement made subsequently to the date of the bond for title. Had there been an agreement made between the parties changing the' description in the bond for title? The defendant in this case asserted that there was a change, and that Eigsby at the time of the reception of
None of the other assignments of error are such as to require the grant of a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.