Bullard v. Hudson

54 S.E. 132, 125 Ga. 393, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 16, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 54 S.E. 132 (Bullard v. Hudson) 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
Bullard v. Hudson, 54 S.E. 132, 125 Ga. 393, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 174 (Ga. 1906).

Opinion

Beck, J.

The executors of M. B. Hudson sought to dispossess Bullard of certain land, alleging that he was a tenant holding over. Bullard filed his counter-affidavit averring that he held the land in his own right. Upon the trial of the case the plaintiffs introduced the following note:

“1000 lbs. By the 15th da}' of October next I promise to pay John B. Hudson, I. S. Hudson, and Sarah T. Hudson, as executors of M. B. Hudson, deceased, 1000 lbs. of middling lint-cotton packed and delivered in Eatonton, G-a., for rent for year 1902 of that certain parcel of land lying in'Putnam county, Ga., on which I now reside, being a two-horse farm being the land I worked in 1901, and adjoining lands of Cinth Athon; B. E. Gooch, Mose Bussy, and-others. As against this debt I waive and renounce all rights of homestead ánd exemption of personalty allowed me under the laws of this State. This February 19th, 1902.
Witness: I. H. Adams, Jr., Ordinary. J. M. Bullard (seal).”

Plaintiffs also introduced evidence tending to prove that the land described in the note was, at the time the defendant entered upon it, the property of their testator’s father, John B. Hudson deceased, and one Mrs. Moseley, as tenants in common; that John B. Hudson, Jr., one of the executors above mentioned, assumed charge of the place upon the death of his father, M. B. Hudson, and sent his [394]*394overseer with a note, similar to the one set forth above, to Bullard for his signature; and that Bullard, after erasing the words, “two-horse farm,” and inserting in lieu thereof, “one-horse farm,” signed the note. The insertion and erasure were not satisfactory to Hudson, and he finally secured Bullard’s signature to the note first above mentioned. Bullard testified, that he did not understand that the description in the note referred to the place on which he lived; that his son Tom had, for some time previous to this transaction, leased from John R. Hudson Sr., the grandfather of the executors of M. R. Hudson, a tract of land lying next to his, Bullard’s, own farm; that his son died in 1901, and he offered to assume his son’s “contract for this tract of land [which was called the Tom Bullard tract] for said year 1901 simply to accommodate the said John R. Hudson, deceased.” Bullard further testified: “In the fall of 1901, M. R. Hudson, who was attending to his father’s business, requested me to rent said Tom Bullard tract for 1902, also saying he could not dispose of it, and to accommodate him I agreed to rent it, but gave him no rent note for it; and while I gave a rent note to the present plaintiff, J ohn R., for this said tract, the contract or agreement to rent the said Tom Bullard farm for said year 1902 had been previously made between said M. R. Hudson, plaintiff’s father, and myself. M. R. Hudson died on the first day of Januar}q 1902, and soon thereafter the present John R. Hudson sent me, through his. overseer and agent, W. A. Gorley, a rent note to sign for said tract of land for said year 1902. After looking over said note I found said tract of land was described as a two-horse farm, whereas I knew it to be only a one-horse farm; both said Gorley and nryself agreed that it was a one-horse farm, and I struck out the word ‘two,’ and inserted in lieu thereof the word ‘one,’ making it read ‘a one-horse farm,’ and signed said note in this shape and delivered it to said Gorley. In Eatonton, a few days after this, I met plaintiff, the said J ohn R. Hudson, and he told me that said land was a two-horse farm and not a one-horse farm, and insisted that I sign a. note with these words in it as written in the first note; he knew all about the Tom Bullard farm or tract of land, and the difference between us was as to whether said tract of land was a one-horse or a two-horse farm, I contending it to be the former, while he held it to be the latter. I finally consented to sign the note as he requested, describing said tract as a two-horse farm, but required him [395]*395to insert therein the words, ‘being the same land I worked in 1901/ When I signed these two rent notes, the words, ‘being land on which I now reside adjoining lands of Cinth Athon, B. E. Gooch, Mose Bussjr, and others/ were not in either. I did not see or notice such words and description. This description covers my own home and my own lands which I have occupied, used, and improved for over thirty years without ever paying rent to any one. This Tom Bullard tract lies adjacent to my own land, and is separated from my land by a line run off and agreed upon between M. E. Hudson and mj'-self before these rent notes were ever given. The Tom Bullard tract belongs to John B. Hudson, deceased. My land consists of one hundred acres. The land and the only land I rented in 1901 and 1902 was the Tom Bullard tract. I am a practical farmer, and know for what lands rent; a one-horse farm rents for 1000 pounds of cotton.”

Gorley, the overseer, testified, that Bullard refused to sign the note he carried to him, “because said note, he claimed, called the land a two-horse farm; he said the Tom Bullard tract'was only a one-horse farm, and for' this reason struck out the words, as I have stated. Before his death M. E. Hudson showed me the line between the Hudson lands and the lands occupied by said Bullard; the Tom Bullard tract lies on the east side of this line on Little river.” Defendant sought to prove by Gorley that the land discussed by defendant in the conversation with witness, at the time of the controversy about the “one” or “two” horse farm, was the Tom Bullard tract, and also that the land rented by Bullard in 1901 was the Tom Bullard tract; but the court would not allow the evidence, on the ground “that it would alter and vary the contract, and that the note itself was the highest and best evidence as to what land was rented.” Defendant then offered to show by parol testimony that the consideration expressed in the rent note was not the true consideration thereof, and that he never intended to rent the lands described in the note, “but that the true and only consideration thereof was said Tom Bullard tract.” The court refused to admit this testimony. Defendant also sought to explain the words, “being the land I worked in 1901,” insisting that they were ambiguous; but the court would not permit it. At the conclusion of the evidence, counsel for plaintiffs moved the court to direct a verdict in'their favor,-while defendant’s counsel asked that a non-[396]*396suit be awarded. The court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs; and the defendant excepted, assigning error upon the court’s refusal to grant the nonsuit, and upon the refusal to admit the testimony above referred to.

1. The defendant sought to arrest the proceedings in this case against himself and to prevent the removal of himself and his goods from the land in controversy by declaring on oath, under the provisions of the Civil Code, §4815, that he held the land in his own right and as his own, and that he did not hold it “under any contract of lease, rent, or otherwise” from the plaintiffs, and that he was not “the [plaintiffs’] tenant as alleged, either at will or. by sufferance,” that he had “never rented the land and premises described by the [plaintiffs] in [their] affidavit and warrant, either from the said [plaintiffs] or from any one else.” Of course, if there was evidence to support this contention of the defendant, the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiffs; and we have to consider whether or not, under all of the testimony in the case, there is to be found sufficient evidence to have authorized a finding-contrary to the verdict directed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.E. 132, 125 Ga. 393, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullard-v-hudson-ga-1906.