Arrington v. Thompson

88 S.E.2d 402, 211 Ga. 734, 1955 Ga. LEXIS 443
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 13, 1955
Docket18974, 18989
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 88 S.E.2d 402 (Arrington v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrington v. Thompson, 88 S.E.2d 402, 211 Ga. 734, 1955 Ga. LEXIS 443 (Ga. 1955).

Opinion

Mobley, Justice.

1. Special grounds 4 and 5 of the amended motion for new trial were disapproved by the trial court, and will not be dealt with. Deed v. Lanier, 208 Ga. 615 (1) (68 S. E. 2d 566).

' Special ground 6 complains that the court erred in admitting over objection an unsigned carbon copy of a purported option made by one of the defendants, J. T. Thompson, to W. C. Smith, reciting among other things that the option was subject to an outstanding interest conveyed to the defendant’s three children.

W. C. Smith testified: Prior to December 12, 1950, the date of the option in controversy, the petitioner and three other men came to his office relative to buying timber. Witness stated he vrould probably be able to sell the timber to them on the land in dispute, when one of the men said they were about to buy that timber or the land, and they were advised witness’s option had run out. Witness told them a turpentine lease was on it, and that the children had an interest in the land. The witness further testified that the paper exhibited to him by the attorney was the option dated November 3, which he held on this particular tract of land, was for a 30-day period expiring on or about December 2, and that it contained the stipulation, “subject to an outstanding interest conveyed to my three children,” and that it was in his handwriting and was the option which was referred to as having run out. Thus the contents of the option material to this case were admitted in evidence without objection.

The improper admission of evidence is not ground for reversal where the same evidence is subsequently admitted without objection. Rogers v. Manning, 200 Ga. 844 (1) (38 S. E. 2d 724); *737 Sapp v. Callaway, 208 Ga. 805 (3) (69 S. E. 2d 734); Healan v. Powell, 91 Ga. App. 787 (2) (87 S. E. 2d 332).

Special ground 7 complains that the court erred in admitting over objection, a letter dated June 5, 1952, written by Eunice Thompson in Cleveland, Ohio, addressed to her brother, James Lindsey Thompson, in Doerun, Georgia, in which she transmitted the purported deed made by her father to the children.

C. E. Parrish, the justice of the peace who witnessed the purported deed of January 22, 1949, testified in part: J. T. Thompson executed the above-mentioned deed in the presence of witness and his bailiff. Witness prepared the deed and its execution was at the time it purports to be. F. E. Fender testified: He was a constable in the justice court and witnessed the deed in question. He did not see J. T. Thompson sign it. The justice of the peace called him in to witness the deed. Mr. Thompson was there, and heard the justice of the peace tell witness Mr. Thompson signed it. Eunice Thompson testified: She lived in Cleveland, Ohio. From time to time her father called on the children for money and he brought this deed to her in January, 1949. Witness and her sister, Myrtice, got up $1,000 for him. Witness kept the deed which he gave her. She wrote the letter, which was admitted in evidence over objection, and enclosed the deed to her brother. She did not 'know she had to record the deed and did not keep it off of the record to help her father defraud anybody. She had never had any knowledge of any trouble between her father and petitioner until the present action was filed.

“Where a deed, regular on its face, is attacked as invalid, the burden of proof rests on the person making such attack to establish the invalidity.” 26 C: J. S. 603, § 190. “In a suit to recover land and to cancel a deed as a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title, the burden is upon the plaintiff to make out such case as entitles him to the relief sought.” Shelton v. Edenfield, 148 Ga. 128 (96 S. E. 3). “While the presumption of law that a deed which contains on its face no indications of falsity was executed on the day it purports to bear date may be controverted by evidence aliunde, the mere suggestion of fraud or falsity does not put on the parties producing it the burden of showing that the deed was actually executed on the day of its purported date.” Nelson v. Brown, 164 Ala. 397 (5) (51 So. 360).

*738 Assuming without deciding that the declarations in the letter from Eunice Thompson to her brother, to the effect that the purported deed of January 22, 1949, was executed on that date rather than in 1952, as contended by the petitioner, were self serving— where, as here, the only evidence in support of the contention of the petitioner was that he first learned of the purported deed after the decision of the Supreme Court was rendered, and that neither J. T. Thompson nor any of his children informed him of the existence of the deed until after it was recorded September 4, 1952, this was not sufficient to show that the deed was fraudulently executed subsequently to the date shown in the deed. Accordingly, there is no merit in this ground, for the reason that a finding was demanded that the deed was executed on the date it purports to have been executed. Delray, Inc. v. Piedmont Investment Co., 194 Ga. 319 (5) (21 S. E. 2d 420, 142 A. L. R. 1116).

2. Special ground 8 complains of the charge: “Now this is the petition and you have a batch of it here. I will state here, just in a general way, I am going to give you two batches of papers. One of them you can consider, of course, if you think it is necessary but it is the record in the original case. You have learned, of course, that there was a contract for the sale of certain lands in Worth County and an option by the defendant, J. T. Thompson, to make a deed to the plaintiff. That matter was litigated and went to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court held the option was a legal and valid contract and should be enforced. You can examine those papers but there is no contest as to the legality of the option, so I don’t know that they would be beneficial, but they have been offered in evidence and will go out with you.”

The effect of the above instruction was that the jury must recognize the validity of the option, as the Supreme Court had held that it was a valid and binding obligation, which was obviously the purpose for its introduction in evidence. The charge was not therefore, as contended, an expression or intimation of an opinion as to the weight of such evidence, in violation of the provisions of Code § 81-1104.

3. Special ground 9 complains of the charge: “Now, after that, the plaintiff in this case comes into court — and he is the holder of the option — and he says that, in spite of the fact that *739

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.E.2d 402, 211 Ga. 734, 1955 Ga. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrington-v-thompson-ga-1955.