13 S.E.2d 100 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
The court did not err in overruling the motion for new trial.
On the trial it was made to appear that the plaintiffs were the children of the A. J. Watkins mentioned in the contract; that pursuant to the terms of the contract A. J. Watkins paid to C. H. Watkins, the defendant, the sum of $600 for the purposes of the contract, and that C. H. Watkins received the said $600 under the terms and conditions of the contract; that thereafter, in February, 1921, A. J. Watkins and his wife became reconciled and resumed their marital relations and lived together as husband and wife, and that while so living together the three children named in the contract lived with their parents and were supported and maintained by their father A. J. Watkins; that after the resumption of the marital status Mr. and Mrs. Watkins called upon the defendant, and A. J. Watkins, in the presence of his wife, demanded the repayment of the $600 from C. H. Watkins, and that at that time C. H. Watkins repaid to A. J. Watkins the sum of $215; that A. J. Watkins and his wife lived together on this last occasion for a period of about three months, when they again separated, *346 and have continuously lived apart since the last separation. C. H. Watkins testified that after the last separation A. J. Watkins demanded of him the balance of the $600 deposited with him, and that he paid to A. J. Watkins an additional sum of $10 and gave him a hog of the value of $15; that A. J. Watkins directed that no part of the $600 paid to C. H. Watkins be paid to any of the children named in the contract; that he was entitled to certain credits for board for one of the minors, and for school books purchased by him for another; that the minors named in the contract became of age on the dates set out in the agreed statement of facts; that each of the children, upon reaching his majority, demanded of C. H. Watkins the sum of $200 with interest from December 1, 1919; that at the time of the filing of the suit A. J. Watkins was in life and confined at the State sanitarium at Milledgeville; that C. H. Watkins, the witness, was due to pay some one $210 balance of the unexpended principal of the original $600, and that before this suit he had written to the plaintiffs agreeing to pay each of them his part of the funds still in his hands.
Counsel for both parties moved for a directed verdict. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiffs for $210 and interest. The defendant made a motion for new trial, and the exception is to the order overruling the motion which was on the general grounds.
The court did not err in overruling the motion for new trial. The defendant admitted in his testimony that he still had on hand $210 of the $600 originally deposited with him under the contract and that he owed it to some one. The court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter, and the direction of a verdict for the plaintiffs was an adjudication that the defendant owed the $210 with interest to the plaintiffs. The defendant can not be hurt because he will be protected in paying the money out on the order and judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction. We are not called upon to decide whether the defendant would be liable to the plaintiffs for the full amount of the money deposited with him under the contract, because the plaintiffs do not complain of the verdict but are here contending that the verdict is correct. The contention of the plaintiff in error that the contract was a voluntary one and could be rescinded by the parties at their discretion or by a subsequent cohabitation is not sound. Code, § *347
30-217, provides that subsequent cohabitation shall not affect the rights of children under such an agreement.Clary v. Thornton,
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Sutton, J.,concur.