Bazemore v. Freeman
This text of 58 Ga. 276 (Bazemore v. Freeman) 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.
Opinion
This was an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover the possession of a tract of land described in the plaintiff’s declaration. On the trial of the case, as it appears from the evidence in the record, it was admitted that the defendant claimed the land in dispute under a deed executed by Mrs. Bazemore, the plaintiff, and her husband, Marcus D. Bazemore. Mrs. Bazemore was in[277]*277troduced as a witness in her own favor, and her counsel proposed to prove by her the following facts, to-wit :
“ That Marcus L>. Bazemore, her husband, practiced duress in reference to the deed, by threatening that if she did not sign the deed he had it in his power to make her miserable, and would do so; that she still persisted in not consenting, when he said he would take her children away to parts unknown, and she should never hear of them again; that under the influence of these threats by her self-willed and dissipated husband, who had slapped her face many times the night before when he was trying to get her consent, she did sign the deed, no one asking her if she was willing to the sale.”
This testimony, so offered by the plaintiff, the court rejected as inadmissible, unless notice thereof was brought home to the vendee of the land. To this ruling of the court the plaintiff excepted, and that is the only alleged error complained of.
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.
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58 Ga. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bazemore-v-freeman-ga-1877.