Bond v. Sullivan

65 S.E. 376, 133 Ga. 160, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 12, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 65 S.E. 376 (Bond v. Sullivan) 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
Bond v. Sullivan, 65 S.E. 376, 133 Ga. 160, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 175 (Ga. 1909).

Opinion

Beck, J.

This suit was brought by Mrs. Louisa A. Sullivan, in Februar}7, 1905, against Allan Bond, to recover a certain tract of land -and the improvements thereon, in the City of Savannah, Georgia. In her petition the plaintiff set up a legal title to the premises, claiming under deed from George W. Anderson Jr., dated July 7, 1883, and recorded August 80 of the same year. The defendant answered, denying the plaintiff’s title, and claiming title in himself under a deed from plaintiff to John F. Harrison, dated January 7, 1897, duly recorded, and under a deed from Harrison to defendant, dated May 16, 1900, and recorded May 9, 1901. Plaintiff introduced evidence for the purpose of showing that, under a scheme participated in by Harrison and defendant, she had been induced to deed the property to Harrison in 1897 in order to pay certain of her husband’s debts, particularly his indebtedness to the Southeastern Plaster Co., a corporation of which Bond was a majority stockholder and Harrison an officer. Bond, the defendant, and Harrison, the grantee in the deed from plaintiff, testified that Harrison was the bona fide purchaser from Mrs. Sullivan, and that neither of them participated in any such [162]*162scheme as above stated. The only question submitted to the jury, by agreement of counsel, was as to the recovery of the land; if the jury should find in favor of plaintiff, the judge was to determine, subject to exception, the amount of mesne profits to be recovered by her, and also determine defendant’s equity by reason of the assumption and payment by his predecessor in title, Harrison, of two mortgages aggregating $6,000, which encumbered the property at the time of his purchase from plaintiff. The jury found in favor of the plaintiff for the recovery of the land. The judge found the net mesne profits to be recovered by her to be $3,833.62, with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent, from May 16, 1905, the date of the filing of the suit; and- that the defendant be subrogated to whatever rights the original mortgagee might have had by the two mortgages referred to. The defendant excepted to the finding of the jury and to each of the findings of the judge.

1, 2. One of the questions presented by this record is, whether or not when a married woman conveys property for the purpose of paying her husband’s debt she can bring an action of ejectment against her grantee or any one claiming under her grantee with notice of the consideration moving the wife to make the deed to Her property, without the institution of equitable proceedings to cancel the deed. This question has been decided in the affirmative more than once by this court. In the ease of Taylor v. Allen, 112 Ga. 330 (37 S. E. 408), it was said that the question was settled by the plain provisions of the code sections which declare that the separate property of the wife shall not be liable for the debts of her husband (Civil Code, §5790), and that any sale by a wife of her separate estate made to a creditor of her husband in extinguishment of his debts shall be absolutely void (Civil Code, §2488). Continuing, the court says: “Section 2474 provides that her property shall not be liable for the payment of any debt, default, or contract of her husband. Such a transaction, then, on the part of a wife is not merely voidable, but is absolutely void. It would be impossible to express in stronger language the absolute nullity of such conveyance of a wife than is employed in the section of the code which we have cited.” In the same decision the Justice delivering the opinion of the court, after citing several cases to support the views announced, says: “"We could cite a number of [163]*163■other decisions of this court clearly indicating that these transactions, involving a conveyance by a wife of her property to pay her husband’s debts, are absolutely void, and can never estop her from bringing an action of ejectment to recover her property so conveyed; and when such a conveyance is presented as a defense, if she show its consideration, she can treat it as an absolute nullity and as conveying no title whatever. We think, therefore, the court committed no error in sustaining the demurrer to the amended plea, and refusing to require the plaintiff to file any equitable pleadings for the cancellation of the deed.”

If the deed in question in this case had been executed by the wife upon the consideration that the grantee should discharge a valid encumbrance upon the property conveyed, and the latter actually discharged such encumbrance, the conveyance might be upheld as valid. But if the discharge of the encumbrances upon the property by the vendee was only a part of the consideration, and the real object of the conveyance was to appropriate the value of the property conveyed, in excess of the amount represented in the encumbrances discharged, to the extinguishment of the debt of the husband actually existing at the time of the conveyance or in ■contemplation at that time, while a part of the consideration would be valid, the other would be illegal, and the deed, being one entire transaction, “can not be upheld, because of the impossibility of separating that which is legal from that which is illegal. It is not the case of a mortgage given to secure several debts, some of which are legal and some illegal, and in which that which is legal may be cut off from that which is illegal, but it is a case in which the whole transaction is so infected with the virus of illegality that there is no possibility of upholding the deed'executed in pursuance of it as a conveyance of title, and the most that can be done is to award, as was done in this case, that in so far as the plaintiff has extinguished that portion of the debt legally due by the wife, it be made a charge against her estate.” Mickleberry v. O’Neal, 98 Ga. 43 (25 S. E. 935).

3. Even if it be true, as is insisted by counsel for plaintiff in error, that there is no evidence to show that Harrison, the purchaser from Mfcs. Sullivan, was a creditor of the husband, if he jointly with Bond devised or entered into a scheme whereby a conveyance of Mrs. Sullivan’s property should be procured, and [164]*164the real purpose of the conveyance was the extinguishment of her husband’s debt to a corporation of which Bond was a majority stockholder, in such a case Harrison might be regarded as the agent of Bond, acting for the benefit of his principal, and the conveyance to him would be void just as if it had been made to Bond or to the corporation of which Bond was a member. Kent v. Plumb, 57 Ga. 207. What is said in the case last cited and the case of Taylor v. Allen, supra, of the effect of such a scheme upon the question of the validity or nullity of a conveyance made to effectuate its purpose, renders unnecessary any discussion of that question here. But inasmuch as this case is to be remanded for a new trial, it is unnecessary to discuss the evidence or to decide whether or not the evidence upon the last trial authorized the finding that the sale of the property in controversy by Mrs. Sullivan to Harrison was a mere colorable transaction, — a part of a plan devised by Bond, or both Bond and Harrison, for the extinguishment of a debt of Mrs. Sullivan’s husband to the Southeastern Plaster Company, a corporation of which Bond was a majority stockholder.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.E. 376, 133 Ga. 160, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-sullivan-ga-1909.