22 S.E.2d 122 | Ga. | 1942
1. Where a wife filed suit alleging that she was in possession of certain real estate the legal title to which was in her husband, and that while a suit for divorce was pending in which this identical property was scheduled, and after a lis pendens motion had been filed in the clerk's office, the husband had conveyed the property to the defendants, who threatened to dispossess her, and praying that said deed be surrendered and canceled, that the defendants be enjoined from coming on said premises or in any manner threatening her, and that a decree be entered subjecting said property to her claim for alimony, and for general relief; and a demurrer to the petition was overruled, and an interlocutory injunction granted, and the defendants sued out a writ of error to this court, assigning error on those rulings, and it appearing in a motion to dismiss and the response thereto that after the case reached this court the property referred to in the divorce suit was awarded to her as permanent alimony, a motion to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that the issues have become moot, is overruled.
2. A suit of the character indicated above, by a wife against the grantees in a deed from her husband, executed after the filing of her action for divorce and alimony, but before the property was awarded to her as alimony, should have been dismissed on general demurrer, since as to such property she has neither title nor the right of possession unless and until the jury awards it to her as alimony.
3. It follows that it was erroneous to grant a temporary injunction forbidding the grantees from entering possession thereof.
2. The general demurrer to the petition should have been sustained. The allegations showed no right to any of the relief sought. A wife, as to property owned by her husband and which is scheduled in a suit for divorce and alimony filed by her, has no title unless and until the particular property is by the jury awarded to her as alimony. Although as to such property duly scheduled a grantee in a conveyance from the husband, executed after the filing of the divorce suit, takes it subject to any verdict subsequently rendered in such suit, this puts no title in the wife until such an award is made, and does not authorize a court, in a suit by her against such grantee, to decree that the property be subjected to her claim for alimony, and to enjoin the grantee from interfering with her possession.
3. It was also erroneous to grant the injunction.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.