Benenson v. Evans

134 S.E. 441, 162 Ga. 578, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 16, 1926
DocketNo. 5046
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 S.E. 441 (Benenson v. Evans) 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
Benenson v. Evans, 134 S.E. 441, 162 Ga. 578, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 241 (Ga. 1926).

Opinions

Hill, J.

Sallie Evans and Rufus Evans filed an equitable petition against J. Benenson and "W. C. Clark, to enjoin Benenson from [579]*579selling certain land described in the petition. The petition alleged, in substance, that the plaintiffs are the owners of certain described land in Colquitt County, the nature of their title being as follows: Eli Clark died intestate in Colquitt County in the year 1905, and W. C. Clark was appointed administrator on his estate, which consisted of real and personal property of considerable value. Among the heirs at law of the intestate were the plaintiff, Sallie Evans, and her sister, a minor, Inez Clark. Before the final winding up of the estate, there being a considerable sum due to Sallie Evans and Inez Clark, the administrator contracted to give them, in lieu of the money that was due them by the administrator, the land in controversy, and marked out the boundaries of said tract of land and abandoned all control over it himself. In the meantime J. T. Evans, the husband at that time of Sallie Evans, was appointed guardian of Inez Clark, who lived with her sister Sallie Evans, who with her sister went into possession of the land in the year 1913. In the year 1914 Inez Clark married Rufus Evans, and lived with him as his wife until her death in the year 1916, when she died leaving as her heirs at law her husband and a child named Rufus Hershell Evans, which child died on September 2, 1916, leaving Rufus Evans as the sole heir at law. The plaintiff, Sallie Evans, and her husband, J. T. Evans, have had full possession of said land as being one of the tenants in common. They have lived on the land continuously since 1913 and farmed the same, and their possession has been open and notorious and peaceable, although no deed to it has ever been made by W. C. Clark, who, being often asked to make such deed, has always on one pretext or another failed to do so, and he is now totally insolvent. Both Sallie Evans and Inez Clark signed a receipt as heirs at law of Eli Clark for their portion of their father’s estate, in consideration of the sale of the said 46-2/3 acres of land to them by W. C. Clark. In November, 1921, W. C. Clark executed and delivered to J. Benenson a security deed to 98-1/2 acres of land, more or less, which is described in the petition. This land includes the land sold to the plaintiff and her sister, and J. Benenson has through his attorneys advertised the whole of the 98-1/2-acre tract for sale under the power of attorney contained in the security deed, the sale being advertised for November 19, 1923. At the date of the security deed Sallie Evans was living on the [580]*580land in controversy, and had been for several years, and has been so residing there continuously since that date. Plaintiffs did not know that Benenson was taking a security deed on their land, and he knew, or could have known by ordinary diligence, of the fact of this residence and possession and of the claims of the plaintiffs to the tract of 46-2/3 acres. Plaintiffs, waiving discovery and alleging that they are remediless at law, prayed that J. Benenson and his agents and attorneys be enjoined from further proceeding with the design of selling the 46-2/3 acres described in the petition ; that the court decree that "W. 0. Clark execute and deliver to plaintiffs a warranty deed to the land so claimed by them; that the court decree the cancellation of the lien of said security deed on the land claimed by petitioners, as constituting a cloud on their title, etc.

The defendant filed an answer in which he denied each and every material allegation of the petition, except his residence in the county. He specifically avers that the property described in plaintiffs’ petition was heavily incumbered in the approximate amount of $2,000 at the time of the alleged purchase of the property by plaintiffs, and has been so incumbered since that time; that the proceeds of the loan made to W. C. Clark by James Benenson went to retire an existing loan on the property, which in turn went to retire the loan existing on the property at the time of the alleged purchase of the property; and it is averred that in the event the purchase of the property was made by plaintiffs in good faith, as alleged in the petition, this defendant would in equity and good conscience be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees as of the date of the alleged purchase of the property by plaintiffs, which rights would be superior to the rights of the plaintiffs as purchasers. The defendant avers that plaintiffs knew, at the time this defendant proposed to make said loan on the strength of the security of said property, that W. C. Clark was seeking a loan from J. Benenson, and that this defendant was about to make the loan, and that said property would be pledged in security thereof, and that the proceeds of the same would be used to retire a then existing incumbrance on said property, which if not retired would cause a sale of the property to be had, which sale would result in the eviction of the plaintiffs from the premises; and plaintiffs knew that this defendant, if informed of their [581]*581contentions as t-o the state of said title, would not make said loan and that said refusal on the part of this defendant to make said loan would result in their eviction from said premises as above alleged, and plaintiffs, with full knowledge of these facts and for the reason herein set out, failed and refused to inform this defendant of their present contentions as to their interest in the property; that such conduct on the part of the plaintiffs in so failing, neglecting, and refusing to inform this defendant of such contentions, amounts to and constitutes an equitable estoppel denying to such petitioners the right to now urge such contentions to the injury and hurt of this defendant.

On the trial of the case the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendants filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and the defendants excepted.

1. The court charged the jury as follows: “If W. C. Clark sold to his sisters, Sallie Evans and Inez Clark, the land described in the petition for the interest of Sallie Evans and Inez Clark in the estate of Eli Clark, and pursuant to such sale put them in possession and the full purchase-money had been paid, then and in that event the title to the lands would be in Sallie Evans and Inez Clark, although W. C. Clark did not then or at any time thereafter make them a deed to the land in controversy.” This charge is not reversible error, under the facts of this case, for the alleged reason that the undisputed evidence was that the title to the property at the time of the alleged sale by Clark to his sisters was in George M. Forman as grantee in a deed to secure a debt, nor for the alleged reason that the movant relied on said deed as the foundation of his right to subrogation contended for by him; and that he was accordingly injured by the charge, in that the instruction was to the effect that title to said property would be in the plaintiffs instead of in George M. Forman, as contended by movant.

The charge states that the “title” to the land would be in Sallie Evans and Inez Clark in the circumstances stated. The court should have qualified this expression by saying that the “equitable title” would be in them. However, the omission of the word “equitable” will not require a reversal, especially since the charge is not excepted to on that ground.

2. Under the facts of this case the court did not err in fail[582]

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.E. 441, 162 Ga. 578, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benenson-v-evans-ga-1926.