174 Ga. 508 | Ga. | 1932
A suit was instituted by heirs at law against the defendant individually and as administrator of the estate of his father, for an accounting and for other equitable relief. The exception is to a judgment overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The general grounds of the motion for a new trial are not argued in the brief of the attorney for the plaintiff in error, and under the rules of this court they will be treated as abandoned.
It was alleged in the petition that the estate consisted in part of 250 acres of land described. The defendant set up in his answer: “When defendant reached the age of 27 or about that age, his father came to him and told him that if he would continue to stay on the place and work the place, that he would give him one third of the 250 acres in consideration of what he had already done in helping him make a living for the family and in keeping up the place, and would thereafter allow him to have the full use of both the 81-acre farm and the 250-acre farm, provided that defendant would pay all the household expenses and would take care of him, defendant’s father, and defendant’s mother, the remainder of their lives. Defendant there and then accepted this proposition and continued to work on the said two farms for these sixteen years since that time, and has continued to spend practically all that the said farms made in supporting his father’s family and keeping up the two farms.” Also, that defendant, on the strength of the agreement, has made specified improvements upon the property
The only special ground of the motion for a new trial complains of the failure of the judge to charge upon the defendant’s theory that in virtue of a parol contract of purchase fully performed on his part he was entitled to a one-third undivided interest in specified realty left by the intestate. The evidence relied on to support the alleged contract is shown in the testimony of the defendant, as follows: “When I was about 26 or 27 years old my father and I had a conversation. He talked about giving me one-third interest on some land for what I had done. It was the Wheeler and Campbell place, 250-acre tract. It was what I call the old- home place. I was talking about leaving, and he told me if I would stay there that he would give me that for what I had
Judgment affirmed.