Bigham v. Kistler

40 S.E. 303, 114 Ga. 453, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 742
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 40 S.E. 303 (Bigham v. Kistler) 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
Bigham v. Kistler, 40 S.E. 303, 114 Ga. 453, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 742 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

In 1881 Willis Miller, the father of Mrs. Jane B. Kistler, executed to her and her children a deed to his entire estate. Sometime thereafter this deed was set aside by a consent decree rendered on a bill filed for that purpose by Miller. Subsequently to this, on January 8, 1885, Miller executed to P. H. Kistler, the husband of Mrs. Jane B. Kistler, a deed to the property now in controversy and known as the Freeman and Driscoll places. On December 1, 1886, Miller executed a deed to the same property to Mrs. Kistler and her children. In 1887 an execution in favor of B. H. Bigham against P. H. Kistler and an execution in favor of Bigham against Mrs. Kistler were levied on the land in dispute. In 1888, while levies on these executions were pending, a bill was filed in the name of Mrs. Kistler and six minor children, named as Nannie, William H., Joel, Martha Ann, Susan, and Mary Kistler, against P. H. Kistler and B. H. Bigham, seeking to enjoin the prosecution of the foregoing executions, and to have the deed made to P. H. Kistler delivered up and cancelled for alleged fraud in its procurement. On this petition, in 1889, a verdict was returned finding “that the judgments in favor of B. H. Bigham against P. H. Kistler and Jane B. Kistler are as follows:” setting forth the amounts allowed against each; the verdict further finding that the lands in controversy were subject to the liens of the executions in favor of Bigham, and that the lands be sold for the purpose of discharging these liens; the balance of the lands remaining after the liens were satisfied to be the property of Mrs. Kistler and her children. Upon this verdict a-decree was rendered, making the verdict [455]*455the judgment of the court, and decreeing that the lands be sold for the purpose and in the manner stated in the verdict; the title to the lands remaining after the executions had been satisfied tobe vested in Mrs. Kistler and her children. Under this decree execution was issued and levied on the land known as the Freeman place, and it was in 1889 sold to Bigham for an amount which was not sufficient to discharge the executions, and a sheriff’s deed made to him. He entered into possession of this land and remained in possession until his death. Some time after the sale of this land the execution issued on the decree was levied on the Driscoll place, the other tract of land described in the verdict and decree. Bigham died in the meantime, and the present petition was brought on October 14, 1895, by Mrs. Kistler and certain of her children and-P. H. Kistler against Mrs. Mary Jane Bigham, as executrix of the will of B. H. Bigham. In this petition the plaintiffs seek to have the decree rendered in 1889 annulled, and to have the sale of the Freeman place set aside, and to enjoin the sale of the Driscoll place. Several grounds for annulling the decree are alleged, among them being that the decree was obtained by fraud on the part of B. H. Bigham, and that no answer was filed by the defendant which would authorize the decree rendered in the case. It was further alleged that the deed from Willis Miller to P. H. Kistler was fraudulent and void, and that Kistler never accepted it, and that title to the property was in the plaintiffs by virtue of the deed made by Miller to them in 1886. The defendant filed demurrers, general and special, to the petition. Some of the special demurrers were sustained and certain parts of the petition were stricken ; the other special demurrers and the general demurrer were overruled. To the overruling of these demurrers the defendant filed exceptions pendente lite. The case then went to trial, when a special verdict in answer to questions propounded by the court was returned, all the findings being in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendant made a - motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and she excepted, assigning error upon her exceptions pendente lite, and upon the refusal of the court to grant her a new trial. Other facts material to a clear understanding of the case are stated hereafter.

1. The defendant demurred to the petition generally, and upon the ground that all of the matters therein set forth were adjudicated by the decree in 1889 in favor of B. H. Bigham, and that no [456]*456sufficient reason was alleged, in the petition why this decree should be set aside. Upon this subject the petition alleged, in substance, that while the suit upon which this decree was rendered was pending, B. H. Bigham sent to the plaintiff, Mrs. Kistler, a message to the effect that no answer had been filed to the petition, and that the case could not, for that reason, be tried at that term of the court-; that hedid'not care to trouble her any more about the land, that title to the same was in her and her children, that she should have the land, and to go home and be content. It is alleged that Mrs. Kistler believed these statements and acted on them by not attending court and prosecuting her case, and that but for the statements she would have remained and looked after her case; and that notwithstanding these representations Bigham had the decree entered in his favor, and Mrs. Kistler did not know of the entering of the decree until informed thereof by her attorney in 1895, a short time before the filing of the present petition. The petition also alleges that the attorney employed by the plaintiffs to file the suit in 1888 abandoned the suit after filing the petition, though the same remained pending on the dockets of the court. It was further alleged, in this connection, that no answer was filed by the defendant to the petition and no issue was made up for the court to try. If it be true as alleged that no answer was filed by the defendant, there were no pleadings upon which to base the decree which was rendered in favor of the defendant. But we think the allegations of the petition on the subject of Eraud were amply sufficient, if true, to authorize the court to grant the relief prayed for. A court of equity will set aside a judgment or decree obtained by fraud or imposition. Civil Code, § 4032. If the allegations of the petition upon this subject be true, the plaintiff was lulled by the defendant into the belief, not only that the case would not be tried at that term of the court, but that he had abandoned all claim to the land to recover which the suit was filed. Where by acts and statements of a defendant a plaintiff is misled into the belief that the defendant will not resist the plaintiff’s claim, and he, acting under this belief, fails to appear and prosecute his claim, as he would have done but for these statements of the defendant, it would be unconscionable to allow the defendant to take advantage of the plaintiff’s absence and have a decree entered in his favor which concluded for all time the plaintiff’s right to enforce his claim. There is noth[457]*457ing in the petition going to show that the plaintiffs were guilty of such laches or negligence as would prevent them from moving when they did to have the decree set aside. It is distinctly alleged that Mrs. Kistler first heard of the decree in 1895, and her failure to be in attendance on the court in 1889 to see that Bigham made good his representations to her was not, under the circumstances, negligence. If the allegations of the present petition do not make a case for the interposition of a court of equity, it is difficult to conceive of any case where the court would be authorized to set aside a judgment on the ground of fraud in its procurement. See, in this connection, Markham v. Angier, 57 Ga. 43; Dodge v. Williams, 107 Ga. 410 (1). Having alleged facts sufficient to have the decree rendered in 1889 annulled, not only as to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.E. 303, 114 Ga. 453, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigham-v-kistler-ga-1901.