57 Ga. 416 | Ga. | 1876
This was an action of ejectment brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover the possession of certain
It appears from the evidence in the record that the plaintiff introduced a deed from Rhett, dated 2d November, 1868, conveying the premises in dispute to him, as trustee of Fannie M. Aiken, to have and to hold the same for her, the said Fannie M., her heirs .and assigns, forever. The plaintiff also offered in evidence a deed executed by himself, as trustee for the said Fannie M., and the said Fannie M., dated 13th of June, 1870, conveying the premises in dispute to Carl Epping for the consideration of $1,629 00. The defendant, Sutton, claimed the premises under a deed made by Eppiug to him therefor, dated 5th of June, 1873. The plaintiff sought to prove, on the trial of the ejectment suit, that Fannie M. Aiken, his cestui que trust, was his wife, t-hat it was her money that paid for the land, and therefore she was equitably entitled to recover it from the defendant. It will be noted that the plaintiff seeks to recover the possession of the land upon his legal title alone; that there are no allegations in his declaration of the equitable rights of his cestui que trust, which he sought to prove at the trial, which would have authorized the introduction of evidence in relation thereto. In other words, the plaintiff’s declaration sets forth a legal cause of action alone, and at the trial he sought to introduce evidence of equitable grounds of relief, without any averments in his declaration to authorize him to do so. In Jones vs. Parker, 55 Georgia Reports, 12, this court held that a court of law has no more power to administer equitable remedies without equitable rights are alleged, than has a court of equity. If the plaintiff, or his cestui que trust, is entitle to any equitable relief in relation to the property sued for, let him distinctly allege it in his declaration so as to put the defendant upon notice as to what that equity is, that he may be prepared to meet it. Good pleading, either in a court of law or in a court
Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.