30 Ga. 899 | Ga. | 1860
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Dr. Turner being the original owner of the negroes, by delivering them to his daughter’s husband soon after her marriage, without using any words to negative the idea of a gift, passed a good title to the son-in-law, unless he had previously divested his own title by the deed. We think the deed is invalid for want of delivery. It is said there was a delivery from Dr. Turner in his own right to Dr. Turner as agent for the grantees. There must be two parties to the delivery of a deed, but here there was only one; there must be the concurrence of two minds in the act, but here there was only one mind. But it is not true that Dr. Turner was an agent for the grantees. The objection to his agency is not that it was self-constituted, for there may be a self-constituted agent for the purpose of receiving a deed. The principal is presumed to ratify an act which is for his benefit, and when he does ratify it, the ratification, by relation, gives the transaction validity from the beginning. The facts which are fatal to the pretension of an agency in this ease are, that the action of Dr. Turner was concealed from the grantees, and that his holding of the deed was not in subordination to them, but was independent of their will, whatever that will might be. He distinctly states not only that he concealed the transaction from all of the grantees, but that he never would have delivered the deed to Mrs. Rutledge, who was one of them. It is a mockery to say that a man takes a paper for another, when he takes it with an intent that that other shall not have it. And let it be borne in mind, that the intent of the grantor was the same as that of the pretended agent, the two being one and the same person, and therefore of one and the same mind. How can it be said that this deed was delivered for the gran
Judgment reversed.