9 S.E.2d 67 | Ga. | 1940
1. One who while an infant executes a deed to real property may in a proper case, upon reaching his majority, disapprove the act, not only as against his immediate grantee, but also as against a subsequent bona fide purchaser.
2. A charge embodying the law of estoppel, when there are no facts to justify it, is erroneous.
3. Statements by the grantor, after reaching his majority, that if the promised consideration which he never received was paid he would let the deed stand, do not amount to ratification, in the absence of proof that the consideration was paid.
4. Since a reversal must be had on consideration of the special grounds of the motion for new trial, and the evidence on the next trial may not be the same, no express ruling is made as to whether the verdict is supported by the evidence.
2. The next criticism is that the judge charged the jury that if the plaintiffs conveyed this property to their brother, and they knowingly permitted that brother to use the property to obtain credit, they would be bound. Closely connected with this portion of the charge was another excerpt, complained of in ground 4 of the motion, to wit: "I charge you that if you believe that this property was so used with the knowledge of the plaintiffs in this case to obtain credit, and that credit was obtained with their knowledge, they would be bound by their deed." This charge may be a sound proposition of law in the abstract, on the theory of estoppel (Hood v. Duren,
3. Counsel for the defendants insists, as an additional reason why a new trial should not be granted, that the plaintiff on attaining his majority ratified the act of making the deed. This insistence is based on the following testimony of the plaintiff: "I was twenty-one years of age in February, 1939. I went to him [his brother, his grantee] after February, 1939, several times, and tried to get him to pay me. I knew he had not paid me. . . I was still willing, after February, 1939, to let the deed stand if they paid me the $100. This was all I considered my interest worth." Other portions of the uncontroverted testimony show that his brother promised to pay him a hundred dollars as consideration for his interest in the property represented by the deed, but that he had never done so. The most that could be said of this is that the plaintiff expressed a willingness, after reaching majority, to ratify a deed made by him during minority, provided he received the promised consideration. There is no contention that the space of time between February, 1939, when he became of age, and May 2, 1939, the date of filing of the suit, was unreasonable delay on his part to exercise his right to disaffirm the conveyance made by him when a minor. It affirmatively appears that he received no consideration for his deed; so we have no question of his retaining benefits received, while at the same time seeking to disaffirm. No ratification was shown.
4. Since the judgment must be reversed in view of the errors pointed out above, and the evidence on the next trial may not be the same, no ruling is made on the general grounds. If, however, on the next trial the evidence is substantially the same on the issue now before the court, the plaintiff will be entitled to a verdict and decree in his favor. Judgment reversed. All theJustices concur.