157 Ga. 464 | Ga. | 1924
(After stating the foregoing facts.) We think the learned trial judge erred in dismissing the petition. In our opinion, none of the grounds of the motion presented a valid objection to the action.
We shall consider the last ground of the demurrer first, because process is jurisdictional, and failure to attach process is fatal to any action. The objection here raised is that the plaintiffs failed to pray for process. Without deciding whether it is necessary in any case that there should be a prayer for process, though usually such prayer is inserted in petitions, it is very easy to see that in this case there was a substantial substitute for such a prayer, if necessary. Section 5552 of the Civil Code makes it
The first ground of the oral demurrer presents the contention that this action to cancel the deed of S. I. Warren can only be prosecuted by his personal representative, and that his heirs at law have no right to recover. Section 3929 of the Code of 1910 declares that “Upon the death of the owner of any estate in realty, which estate survives him, the title vests immediately in his heirs at law.” § 3657, defining a fee-simple estate, such as is involved in the present case, declares: “An absolute or fee-simple estate is one in which the owner is entitled to the entire property, with unconditional power of disposition during his life, and descending to his heirs and legal representatives upon his death intestate. Bealty descends directly to the heirs, subject to be administered by the legal representative, if there be one, for the payment of debts and the purposes of distribution. If there be a legal representative, the right to recover it is in him; if there be none, the heirs may sue in their own name.” It is stated in the petition that there is no legal representative of S. I. Warren; and so it will be seen that the proposition urged by the Federal Land Bank is directly in conflict with the Code sections. It is well settled that the right 'to administer exists in creditors. They can apply for administration, and then there will be a legal representative “for the payment of debts and the purposes of distribution,” but there
The second ground of the motion to dismiss raises the point that the plaintiffs cannot maintain their action after the allowance of the intervention, unless they allege and prove that the Federal Land Bank of Columbia had notice of the mental incapacity of the deceased grantor. It would seem that the lack of notice or knowledge on the pari of the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, which intervened in this case of its own motion, would be so peculiarly defensive that it would devolve upon it to plead that defense. The action was not brought by the plaintiffs against the Federal Land Bank separately or jointly with Sutton. It was brought against Sutton alone, and as between the plaintiffs and Sutton the
In Chew v. Bank of Baltimore, 14 Md. 318, Tuck, J., observed: “There are many cases in England to show that such persons [insane] are held by their contracts unless fraud and imposition have been practiced, but to this we cannot assent. The doctrine in this country is the other way, and, as we think, is sustained by better reasoning than the English rule as announced in some of their decisions. The effect in many cases would be to place lunatics on the same footing with persons of sound mind, with less effective means to protect the injured party- against the fraud; for, at law as well as in equity, fraud and imposition may be relied on without refer
It must be admitted that some respectable authorities differ with the view of the Supreme Courts of Maine and Massachusetts, to which we have just referred only because of their apt expression and because they coincide with the views of this court. In Woollay v. Gainas, 114 Ga. 122 (39 S. E. 892, 88 Am. St. R. 22), this court unanimously decided that “Ignorance by one party to an alleged contract of the fact that the other party was insane at the time of its execution does not per se entitle the former to enforce it against the latter.” In this case the trial judge charged the jury that if Sarah Woolley “was mentally incapacitated to make the deed, and Gaines and Lewis did not have knowledge of the fact and took the deed in good faith, then her mental incapacity would not warrant you in setting aside the deed, and you would sustain the deed notwithstanding her mental incapacity, if you find that they did not know or had no knowledge of the fact of her mental imbecility.” Mr. Justice Lewis, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “The portion of the charge of the court which we have quoted was plainly error. No question as to the knowledge or want of knowledge of the plaintiffs, or either of them, concerning the mental condition of Sarah Woolley, should have been injected into the case. ‘A person whose mind is so unsound as not to have capacity to contract is . . incapable of making a binding conveyance. But the deed of one who has not been judicially declared insane is not wholly void; it conveys the seizin, and must therefore be avoided at the grantor’s instance after restoration to reason, or at the instance pi his heirs or legal representatives after his death.’ 9 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. (2d ed.) 119. ‘The contract of an insane
In Boynton v. Reese, 112 Ga. 354, 356 (37 S. E. 437), it was held that “A petition for the cancellation of an instrument purporting to be a deed, alleging that at the time of its execution the alleged maker was non compos mentis and totally incapable of contracting, is neither strengthened nor, as to the real gravamen thereof, materially affected by an additional allegation that the person named in the instrument as grantee procured its execution ‘by false and fraudulent means and artful practices.’ ” The court ruled that “if in point of fact Charity Crawford, the grantor, was really non compos mentis and incapable of entering into a binding contract, it could not matter under what circumstances her signature to the conveyance was procured; . . if the deed executed by her was, for the reason just stated, inoperative, it could not be successfully relied on by the defendant as passing title into him, irrespective of the question whether he did or did not resort to fraudulent means and artful practices in order to induce her to sign it.” In the Boynton case, as in the case at bar, the maker of the deed had died, and it was alleged, as in the case now before us, that she was non compos mentis “up to the time of her death,”
A purchaser in good faith from one who has no title, in ignorance of the rights of the true owner, obtains no title. Compton v. Cassada, 54 Ga. 74 (2). It is alleged in the petition that the-father of the plaintiffs, and after his death the plaintiffs themselves and as his heirs, have held continuous possession. “Possession of land is notice of whatever right or title the occupant has.” Civil Code of 1910, § 4528. It will be seen that the Federal Land Bank of Columbia by the exercise of ordinary diligence might have learned something to their profit by inquiring, before the loan was made,
Judgment reversed.