Chamblee v. Wayman

146 S.E. 851, 167 Ga. 821, 1929 Ga. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1929
DocketNos. 6628, 6629
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 146 S.E. 851 (Chamblee v. Wayman) 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
Chamblee v. Wayman, 146 S.E. 851, 167 Ga. 821, 1929 Ga. LEXIS 41 (Ga. 1929).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

About the year 1899 Sallie Wayman, a childless colored woman living in Atlanta, entered into a contract with Jim Durden, the father of Dahlia Wayman and Nellie McWee, at Chattanooga, Tennessee, in which she agreed that she would take his two little girls, adopt them, educate them, and make them her heirs to inherit whatever property she might have. In consideration of this promise Durden surrendered all rights as father of these infants, and delivered them to her, and she brought the girls, about 5 and 7 years of age at that time, to Atlanta. Their mother was dead, and their father died shortly after they were placed in Sallie Wayman’s possession. The evidence as to the gift of his children by the father to Sallie Wayman is uncontradicted. In January, 1926, Sallie Wayman, who in the meantime had remarried and had become Sallie Cobb, died intestate, leaving no blood relations nearer than first cousins, and without having legally adopted either Dahlia Wayman or Nellie McWee. Dahlia Wayman was appointed temporary administratrix and as such took charge of Sallie Cobb’s estate. Hester Chamblee and Cleo Strickland filed a caveat to her appointment as permanent' administratrix, and the county administrator, Frampton E. Ellis, was appointed administrator of the estate. Dahlia Wayman and Nellie McWee filed their petition against the administrator, setting up the foregoing facts, and asking for a decree of specific performance of the oral contract of adoption made by Sallie Wayman with their father. An answer was filed by the administrator, in which he neither admitted nor denied the material allegations of the petition. An answer was filed by Hester Chamblee and Cleo Strickland asintervenors,” in which they denied the material allegations of the petition, and claimed to be first cousins of Sallie Cobb, and as such entitled to inherit her estate. Upon the trial the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, and a decree was taken on February 2, 1928, declaring them [823]*823to be the sole heirs at law of Sallie Cobb and as such entitled to receive the proceeds of the estate, and directing the administrator to specifically perform, as far as lay within his power, the contract of Sallie Cobb with petitioner’s father to adopt them, by delivering to them the proceeds of the estate. On February 6, 1928, a motion for a new trial was filed in the name of Ellis, the administrator, and the “intervenors,” by the same counsel who had filed the answer and the alleged intervention. On March 3, 1928, an order was granted by the court, reciting that the administrator was present and the intervenors were represented, and that the administrator expressed a desire to be relieved as a party, and ordering the administrator to be dismissed as a party in the cause and relieved from further liability as such, and that he be dismissed as movant in the motion for a new trial. On March 16, 1928, Hester Chamblee and Cleo Strickland filed an application for an order calling upon the petitioners to show cause why Chamblee and Strickland should not be made parties nunc pro tunc to the action as of the date of the filing of their intervention therein. A response to this rule was filed and the respondents denied the right of Chamblee and Strickland to be made parties to the cause or to have an order nunc pro tunc allowing their intervention, it being insisted that no order of the court had been taken allowing them to become parties to the motion for a new trial, and that, the cause having gone to judgment, they could not be made parties by intervention and were not entitled to an order nunc pro tunc making them parties to the cause as of the date of the filing of their alleged intervention, since there had been no order either making them parties or allowing the intervention at the time it was filed. It was further insisted that Hester Chamblee and Cleo Strickland were not entitled, as a matter of right, to become parties to the action, unless fraud or collusion could be shown between the administrator and the petitioners, and that there was no charge of that nature in the application. On April 1, 1928, the court granted an order making Hester Chamblee and Oleo Strickland parties to the suit, and allowing the intervention as of January 18, 1927, and making said parties defendants as of that date, and allowing them to proceed as movants in the motion for a new trial. Thereafter the court overruled the motion for a new trial. To that judgment the movants excepted. To the order allowing those movants to intervene and be made parties, the plaintiffs sued out their cross-bill of exceptions.

[824]*824We shall first consider the questions raised in the main bill of exceptions. The exception is to the judgment in refusing a new trial, upon a motion made by the intervenors upon the rendition of a verdict in favor of the petitioners who claimed to have been virtually adopted by Sallie Wayman. The petitioners sued the administrator of the latter, to enforce specific performance of a contract alleged to have been made by the deceased with the father of the petitioners, in which she agreed to adopt, rear, educate, and make heirs of her estate the petitioners, and in consideration of which their father relinquished absolutely his parental control and delivered the children to the administrator’s intestate. Aside from the general grounds there are four special grounds containing assignments of error.

So far as the general grounds are concerned, it suffices to say that there was abundant evidence of many witnesses establishing the fact that Sallie Wayman, or Cobb, always stated that she had adopted the two little girls, and that she called them her children. She frequently stated that she had adopted them. She paid bills for medical attention for them and sent them to several schools at which she paid tuition. She exercised complete control over their actions; and so far as Dahlia Wayman was concerned, she was apparently very delicate and sick most of the time, but when able to work she paid her wages to her adopted mother, as did Nellie McWee until her marriage. There was some evidence of circumstances which might indicate that one or both of the children were high-tempered and that on one or two occasions they left the home of their foster-parent, but these difficulties appear always to have subsided within a short time. The evidence of the gift of his two children by Jim Durden to Sallie Wayman, or Cobb, was wholly uncontradicted; and the witness was certainly swearing against his own interest, for it is admitted by all of the witnesses who had knowledge of the family relationships that this witness, Nace Candler, was himself a first cousin of the deceased, and would have received an equal share with the intervenors had they prevailed in their contention adverse to the claim of adoption. There is such a volume of evidence that we shall not attempt to even summarize it. A careful consideration of the evidence satisfies us that the jury was fully authorized to find the verdict returned. In the brief of counsel for the plaintiffs in error [825]*825there is no contention to the contrary of the statement jnst made, inasmuch as the general grounds of the motion are not referred to.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error in their brief say: “The ques-.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.E. 851, 167 Ga. 821, 1929 Ga. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamblee-v-wayman-ga-1929.