182 Ga. 826 | Ga. | 1936
After careful consideration of the record and the assignments of error in the motion for new trial, and the briefs of counsel, we have reached the conclusion that, considering alone the three general grounds of the motion, the court erred in overruling the motion. In this view, it would be a useless consumption of time to deal with any of the numerous special grounds of the motion. It is not only unlikely that the same questions will arise upon another trial, but if this should be the case, they will appear in a different form, in view of what we shall hereafter say in the course of this opinion. The following facts are uncontradicted in the evidence: D. B. Lynn, the defendant in fi. fa., is a brother of the plaintiff, Mrs. Lilia Belle Wells. In 1927 Lynn sold his sister a tract of land for which she paid him in money $1,500. The land was at the time encumbered by a security deed, from which Lynn told his sister he could release the land by paying $1,000, and on the faith of this representation Mrs. Wells paid him the $1,500. In the record are a number of circumstances which developed clearly that Lynn had no intention of fulfilling the trust imposed upon him by his promise to his sister. The close relationship existing between them is sufficient, if the testimony be believed, to create, not an ordinary bargain at arm’s length, but to make a fiduciary relation. In May, 1930, the land was sold by the holder of the security deed, in natural sequence to Lynn’s failure to carry out his fraudulent representation to his sister.
The plaintiff in fi. fa. filed a suit against Lynn. The petition contained, among other allegations, the statement, “that at the time the said defendant, D. E. Lynn, made the said warranty deed to your petitioner, there was outstanding a legal title of said premises in and to the International Life Insurance Company, . . placed on it by deed of conveyance from one Jeff Lynn, . . the grantor of the said D. E. Lynn, . . subject to the title in said insurance company, . . who obligated to pay off and discharge the said loan debt at the time of his purchase from Jeff Lynn, and again he so promised your petitioner at the time he sold and conveyed to your petitioner for $1,500 in cash the 185 acres of land embraced in the first description of the land above described. But, acting in bad faith and contrary to good conscience, , , D. E. Lynn failed to use the specific sum of $1,500
From the petition of Mrs. Wells it is clearly to be seen that while the warranty of title is mentioned, and a copy of the warranty taken from the deed is set forth, the case of the plaintiff, properly construing the word “debt,” several times used as being the equivalent of “entrusted,” sets forth a sufficient allegation
In view of the fact that the claimant had admitted a prima facie case in favor of the plaintiff in fi. fa., the mere admission of the purported deeds amounted to nothing. In Cruger v. Tucker, 69 Ga. 557, it is ruled: “The recitals in a deed are only binding on the parties thereto and those claiming under them; they are not evidence against one who does not claim under any of the parties to it, either as a privy in law or in estate. . . Creditors of a grantor who attacked a deed made to a trustee for his wife and children, as fraudulent and void, and sought to enforce their [the creditors’] claims against the property, were not bound by the recitals of such deed.” In delivering the opinion of the court Mr. Justice Speer said: “There is an exception made that the court charged the jury, 'that the recitals in the deed from Cruger to Jennings, trustee, are not evidence as to third parties; that it must be proved to your satisfaction that he owed the estate this debt;’ and also erred in reading section 1952 of the Code [Code of 1933, § 28-201] in this connection, — plaintiff insisting said recitals
In Kelly v. Simmons, 73 Ga. 716, it was held: “Where an insolvent debtor made a voluntary conveyance to his wife and daughters, who conveyed to certain purchasers with notice, and upon the agreement that such purchasers would pay the debts of the husband and father, — if one of his creditors reduced his claim to judgment and levied on the land so conveyed, it was subject thereto. (a) Such transactions between husband and wife and children should be closely scanned, and where the purchasers under the wife and daughters interposed a claim to such levy, it was incumbent on them to have shown the bona fides of the transaction. (6) Eecitals in the deed from the debtor to his wife and daughters, stating the consideration thereof to be a debt due by him to them, were not evidence against a creditor, and it was incumbent on the claimants to have shown them to be true.” With the substitution of “wife” for “wife and daughters,” we think that the rulings in the Kelly case are applicable to the case at bar. The evidence disclosed that Lynn was not only insolvent, but bankrupt. The conveyances to his wife, if they proved anything, only showed voluntary conveyances, and the conveyances to Blitch, as appears from the record, were not only without consideration, but his relations to Lynn and his wife were such as would have authorized a jury to impute notice. In delivering the opinion of the court in the
The claimant insists that he was entitled to the verdict rendered in his behalf, on the ground that Lynn was adjudicated a bankrupt in 1934, and thereby discharged of the obligation of any liability to Mrs. Wells, the plaintiff in fi. fa. In section 17 of the bankruptcy act of 1898, as amended in 1903, it is provided as follows: “A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all of his provable debts, except such as . . are liabilities for obtaining property by false pretenses or false representations.” We have already said that in our opinion the evidence is suffi
Judgment reversed.