Ausley v. Cummings

89 S.E. 1071, 145 Ga. 750, 1916 Ga. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 89 S.E. 1071 (Ausley v. Cummings) 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
Ausley v. Cummings, 89 S.E. 1071, 145 Ga. 750, 1916 Ga. LEXIS 466 (Ga. 1916).

Opinion

Lumpkin, J.

A more extraordinary case than this rarely finds its way into court. Some of the salient features of it, which the jury could find from the evidence, were as follows: T. A. Ausley, a real-estate agent, pretended to W. E. Smith and his associates that a certain plantation in Florida could be bought for an amount somewhat in excess of $40,000, that it was partly planted in pecan trees, and that by setting out other trees it could be sold to E. E. Vinson for $185,000, payable in installments. As a means of inducing them to make the trade, he led them to believe that Vinson had deposited $4,000 in a bank in Bainbridge, Georgia, for the purpose of making the first payment. In fact no such person as Vinson had any dealing with the bank. T. A. Ausley placed with the bank his own note for $4,000, indorsed by J. C. Mc-Caskill, and arranged for the use of that amount if needed. He was to be paid by the purchasers for representing them in the transaction. Later one of the intended purchasers decided not to enter into the trade, and Ausley obtained his uncle, McCaskill, to be substituted as the ^fourth man. He also secured a $2,000 reduction from the purchase-price named, so as to make it apparently $42,400. The vendor lived in Brundidge, Alabama. When the time for closing the matter arrived McCaskill did not go to Alabama, but T. A. Ausley stated to the plaintiffs, who went there, that his father, J. C. Ausley, who lived in Alabama, would represent McCaskill, and would pay the amount due for his one-fourth interest. An attorney for Vinson (employed by T. A. Ausley) went with the party. The elder Ausley joined them on the road, and went with them to Brundidge, but did not go with them to an office where they went, saying that he would go ahead and arrange about the payment of the one fourth of the money for the McCaskill interest; and after that he was not seen again by the plaintiffs. There was some little delay in examining and preparing papers, and in investigating the title to a certain part of the land, so that the transaction was not finally closed at that time, but the plaintiffs placed in the bank at Brundidge three fourths of what purported to be the purchase-price, that is $31,800, in checks, which was to be paid over to the vendor, one Waters, as soon as the title was arranged to the satisfaction of the attorney, in regard to the small portion of the land mentioned. The two plaintiffs who were present returned home. They did not em[753]*753ploy a separate attorney, being willing to rely on the examination and satisfaction of tbe one whom they understood had been employed by Yinson. Later the matter which caused the delay was arranged satisfactorily to the attorney, and a deed was executed by Waters to the plaintiffs and McCaskill. When executed it purported to be on a consideration of $42,400. (Waters testified that it was between $40,000 and $44,000.) Subsequently this amount was so changed in the deed as to read $15,000, to prevent the land from being assessed too high for taxation, as a witness testified. Neither McCaskill nor J. C. Ausley paid anything. In fact the vendor had agreed for T. A. Ausley to sell the property for $20,000 cash, and, if he should make a sale for more, he could have the excess. When the matter was closed at the bank in Brundidge, none of the plaintiffs being present, the vendor received the purchase-price of $20,000 in full payment; and the balance placed in the bank by the plaintiffs in checks (as they were informed by T. A. Ausley, to pay three fourths of the purchase-price) , amounting to $11,800, was delivered to T. A. Ausley, or sent to him through the banks. There was evidence that J. C. Ausley offered to give a check for McOaskill’s one-fourth interest, but was told that it was unnecessary, as the vendor had been paid all he claimed. Of the $11,800 turned over to T. A. Ausley by the bank, $4,000 was used to take up his note indorsed by Mc-Caskill, which was in the bank at Bainbridge, and served in place of the supposed deposit by Yinson; and, after payment of the attorney’s fee, $50, $250 as the first payment to T. A. Ausley for his services, and $500 as a first payment for fruit-trees contracted for, to be planted on the place, the balance of $3,200, was equally divided among the three plaintiffs and McCaskill, each receiving $800. A short time later, when a second payment from Yinson fell due, T. A. Ausley exhibited what purported to be a telegram from Oakland, California, stating that Yinson had died and had been buried there on a previous date. Later he exhibited another telegram that an agent or representative would be out in a short time to deal with the matter. This was signed with the name of B. T. Yinson. Smith, one of the plaintiffs, sent a telegram to the mayor of Oakland, and received an answer that no such person as Yinson had been buried there. There was testimony that Ausley later admitted that the purported telegrams were fakes. In [754]*754fact the evidence tended strongly to show that there was no such real person as Vinson; but that he seemed to be one of those mythical characters frequently spoken of but never seen, like Sairey Gamp’s Mrs. Harris, in Dickens’s novel of Martin Chuzzlewit. Although T. A. Ausley claimed to have seen him several times in Bainbridge, he testified that he first accidentally met a man in the hotel at a very early hour in the morning, who was waiting for a train, and who informed him his name was Vinson, and that from this the negotiations began. He did not know that Vinson had ever registered at any hotel, nor was any way shown by which he could be identified. The attorney who examined and drew the papers testified, that on one occasion while three men were talking with T. A. Ausley, as the witness approached he was told by Ausley to “shake hands with Mr. Vinson;” that afterward Ausley informed him that Vinson had to leave town; and that on his behalf (as Ausley alleged) Ausley arranged with the attorney to examine and prepare the papers. This was the only time the attorney ever saw any person purporting to be Vinson. McCaskill testified that before he was connected with the transaction some one pointed out a man standing on the sidewalk as Vinson. No other witness save T. A. Ausley claimed to have seen this man who was making a trade involving $185,000. Much of the evidence indicated that Vinson was either a myth or a dummy, probably the former. After he had been disposed of by a pretended burial in California, the sum of $500 was paid by the plaintiffs to the nurseryman for a release from the contract to furnish pecan trees, which had been made by them and McCaskill in the firm or joint name of the Christmas Pecan Company. Discussions were had as to what should he done, and whether T. A. Ausley should be prosecuted, but this was not done. McCaskill took part in some of these discussions, but later made a quitclaim deed for the one-fourth interest, which the deed from Waters had vested in him, to J. C. Ausley, the father of T. A. Ausley. J. C. Ausley later, under negotiations by T. A. Ausley, conveyed this one-fourth interest to a purchaser in Florida, who was not shown to have had any notice of the transaction (though the deed to him was made by J. C. Ausley after this suit was filed), and who paid a valuable consideration, all which T. A. Ausley received. Subsequently the plaintiffs paid about $5,000 [755]*755to the holder to get back his one-fourth interest, to prevent a partitioning of the land.

The plaintiffs filed the present equitable petition showing the concealed profit and interest which their agent, T. A.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.E. 1071, 145 Ga. 750, 1916 Ga. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ausley-v-cummings-ga-1916.