109 Ga. 628 | Ga. | 1900
A petition was filed by Wilhelmina Schmitt, in the superior court of Fulton county, against J. T. Schneider, the Maddox — Rucker Banking Company, the Citizens Loan .& Building Company, and certain named individuals. Upon a demurrer filed by Schneider, the petition was dismissed, and. the plaintiff excepted. In some way not distinctly disclosed by the record brought to this court, the other defendants were eliminated from the litigation. It is inferable that as to them the petition was voluntarily dismissed. At any rate, the only question argued here was whether or not the petition set forth a cause of action against Schneider, and we shall accordingly deal with this question only. In brief, the petition made the following case: Many years ago, the plaintiff and the defendant both resided in the City of New York, she then having a living husband and he a living wife from whom he had separated. They met and “became infatuated with each other.” He falsely represented to her that he had been divorced from his wife. They entered into an agreement to be married as soon as her husband died or she obtained a divorce from him. Meanwhile, she was to keep house for Schneider and take care of his two minor children, who were the offspring of his marriage with the deserted wife. They resided together on these terms for some months in New York, and then moved to Ohio, where for a number of years they sustained similar relations until the death of the plaintiff’s husband. They then agreed to live together and cohabit as man and wife, and made a contract to this effect, the defendant falsely and fraudulently rep
Taking into view all of the above allegations and prayers, it is clear that the scheme of the petition was to obtain an accounting from Schneider and a division in kind of property alleged to belong jointly to him and the plaintiff. Her object seems to have been to obtain a winding up and settlement of a quasi partnership between them, having its origin in the relations they had sustained towards each other during the years of their cohabitation. Manifestly, in this view of the petition, it was without equity or merit. There was no actual partnership, of course; nor did any trust in the property acquired by Schneider arise for the benefit of the plaintiff. She gave him no money to invest for her individual use, nor was there any undertaking or promise on his part, express or implied, to invest for her or allow her any interest whatever in his accumulations. For her services and for her money which went into his hands he may be liable-to pay; but the only relation which could, relatively to these matters, arise between them is that of debtor and creditor. That he may have perpetrated a fraud upon her gives her no title, legal or equitable, to property acquired by him in his own right, although it may have been purchased with his ill-gotten gains; for, to compensate a person upon whom a fraud has been committed, the law affords full relief by providing for the recovery of damages. In this-connection, the case of Millirons v. Dillon, 100 Ga. 656, is'quite -pertinent. Counsel for the plaintiff recognized the soundness