185 Ga. 181 | Ga. | 1937
In the original petition and the first amendment there was no allegation as to actual possession of the 50 acres in controversy, except the general statement that the defendant R. F. Wardlaw would, “survey' out” 50 acres where the plaintiffs now live and execute deeds to same to Mrs. L. C. Wardlaw, this statement being contained in paragraph 4 of the petition, and apparently based upon the clause in the writing that the 50 acres “should include the home place where L. C. Wardlaw now resides,” and except the allegation in paragraph 9, “that the lands on which plaintiffs live and all furniture thereon are the property of Mrs. L. C. Wardlaw.” These averments show possession only of the “home place,” and not of the entire 50 acres. In the second amendment, however, it is alleged that immediately after executing the instrument in question the parties went into possession of their
The second amendment as allowed subject to demurrer, however, contained much that was improper in an amendment, and was therefore subject in part to the demurrer filed. Paragraphs 5 to 9, inclusive, and prayers 3 and 4 of this amendment refer to rescission and damages, and were objectionable as attempting to allege a new and distinct cause of action. It will be seen that these portions of the amendment do not refer to the claim of Mrs. Ward-law, to whom the deed to the fifty acres was to^ be executed.' Accordingly, the allegations do not constitute an alternative claim for damages in lieu of specific performance. Cf. Loewus v. Eskridge & Downing Inc., 175 Ga. 456 (5) (165 S. E. 576); Woodall v. Williams, 176 Ga. 343 (167 S. E. 886); Riverside Land & Irrigation Co. v. Sawyer, 24 Colo. App. 442 (134 Pac. 1011). On the contrary, the claim as to rescission and damages is made solely on behalf of L. C. Wardlaw, and is predicated upon the theory of fraud. It is contended that the 50-aere tract is of the value of $3,000, and that if the title thereto can not be decreed in Mrs. Wardlaw the whole contract should be set aside, the parties placed in status quo, and the deed to E. F. Wardlaw canceled as having been obtained by fraud; or, that L. C. Wardlaw do have and recover of the defendant E. F. Wardlaw the sum of $3,000, this being the reasonable value of the land fraudulently obtained by E. F. Wardlaw by executing a memorandum the conditions of which he did not intend to perform. In the original petition the plaintiff relied upon an alleged contract as a valid undertaking, and prayed for a decree of specific performance based' thereon in favor of Mrs. Wardlaw; whereas the amendment seeks a recovery of damages only in behalf of the other plaintiff, L. C. Wardlaw. Furthermore, the amendment would change from a reliance upon the contract to a repudiation of the same, and would thus proceed upon a theory entirely opposite to that advanced in the original
Judgment reversed in part, and affirmed in part.