Craig v. Day

88 S.E.2d 451, 92 Ga. App. 339, 1955 Ga. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 5, 1955
Docket35663
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 88 S.E.2d 451 (Craig v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craig v. Day, 88 S.E.2d 451, 92 Ga. App. 339, 1955 Ga. App. LEXIS 588 (Ga. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Carlisle, J.

1. The evidence adduced upon the trial of the issues raised by the affidavit and counter-affidavit in this dispossessory-warrant proceeding was in conflict, but sufficient to authorize the jury to find that the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant was that of landlord and tenant at will; that the defendant tenant failed and refused to pay the rent when due and was holding over and beyond her term; and that the defendant tenant, by claiming the property as her own and indicating, prior to the institution of the dispossessory warrant proceedings, that she would not surrender possession of the property under any circumstances, made it unnecessary that an actual demand of possession be made by the plaintiff. The verdict in favor of the plaintiff was, consequently, authorized by the evidence. According to the plaintiff’s contentions as reflected by his *341 evidence, he was the duly adopted son of the defendant’s sister. When he was approximately 18 months of age, his adoptive mother in 1932 purchased the property, consisting of a house and 250 acres of land, which is now in dispute. He and his adoptive mother, along with the defendant and her family, lived on the property until he was approximately six years of age, when he and his mother moved to Nashville, Tennessee. When he was approximately eight years of age, his mother deeded the entire property to him through a trustee, and those deeds were duly recorded in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Henry County, Georgia, where the property is situated. Although he held title to the land, he gave his mother all the proceeds from the land, and she continued to manage the property and collect the rents from the defendant in his behalf. By agreement with his mother, the defendant—who with her family had continued to live on the property after the plaintiff and his mother moved to Nashville—was to pay a varying number of bales of cotton per year as rent, and the plaintiff was, on one occasion, present when the warehouse receipts and samples of cotton were delivered to his mother by two of the defendant’s children, and the plaintiff took the warehouse receipts and sold the cotton and deposited the money to his mother’s account in the bank. This occurred in November of 1951. In February of 1950, the plaintiff’s mother had entered into a timber lease in her own name and had sold the timber on the property to a third person for $2,700. The timber was cut and the money paid to his mother. According to the records of the tax receiver of the county, the property had been returned for taxes in the name of the plaintiff’s mother from 1932 until 1952. The plaintiff’s mother died in December of 1951, and the taxes on the property for 1952 were paid by the defendant, though returned as on the property of the estate of the plaintiff’s mother. In June of 1952, the plaintiff received a letter written on behalf of the defendant and at her direction, in which the defendant claimed the property as her own. Various letters from members of the defendant’s family, who lived on the property with the defendant, to the plaintiff’s mother and to the plaintiff and his mother were introduced in evidence, from which it was inferable that some of the defendant’s children, at least, considered that the plaintiff’s mother was the owner of the prop *342 erty, and that the relationship of landlord and tenant existed between the defendant and the plaintiff’s mother.

The defendant’s defenses were various. According to her contentions, as reflected by the evidence, the plaintiff’s mother had purchased the property in 1932 for $2,400, and had agreed with the defendant that she would give her the property if she would move her family to the property and assist the plaintiff’s mother, who was a widow, in running the property and caring for the plaintiff, who was at that time an infant of eighteen months of age, which the defendant did. The defendant also contended that she and the plaintiff’s mother agreed that the property would be the defendant’s if she paid the plaintiff’s mother three percent interest on the purchase price and eventually paid the purchase price through her labor; and that she had paid the purchase price in that fashion and had paid the three percent interest annually by turning over a certain number of bales of cotton to the plaintiff’s mother. She contended further that she had paid the purchase price also by allowing the jolaintiff’s mother to sell the timber on the land, and that, at the time the plaintiff’s mother sold the timber, it was agreed between the defendant and the plaintiff’s mother that the plaintiff’s mother would take the timber and the defendant could have the land.

As the conflicts in the evidence on all the material issues were resolved in favor of the plaintiff by the jury, and the verdict was authorized by the evidence, there is no merit in the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.

2. The plaintiff’s testimony, to the effect that he made a parol gift of the proceeds from the land to his mother after she had deeded the property to him, was not inadmissible as a self-serving declaration, and there is no merit in special ground 3 of the motion for new trial.

3. A tenant at will who is in arrears with his rent, and who refuses on demand to surrender the premises, may be ejected by dispossessory warrant sued out pursuant to the provisions of Code § 61-301, and it is not necessary in such a proceeding that the two months’ notice, which is a requisite to the termination of a tenancy at will under the provisions of Code § 61-105, be given the tenant at will. Lanier v. Kelly, 6 Ga. App. 738 (65 S. E. 692); Bussell v. Swift, 50 Ga. App. 148 (1) (177 S. E. 277). Un *343 der an application of the foregoing rule of law, the trial court in the present case did not err in charging the jury: “Now, gentlemen, our law provides that when anyone owns a piece of property and has rented it out to another for an indefinite time, to a tenant at will, then if he demand possession of it, and the tenant refuses to give possession, he has [the]' right to take out what we know as a dispossessory warrant,” on the grounds that such charge states an incorrect principle of law and fails to take into account the requirement of law that a tenant at will be given two months’ notice. The charge correctly stated the law applicable to the case, and there is no merit in special ground 4 of the motion for new trial.

4. The evidence was uncontradicted that the plaintiff’s mother deeded the property to the plaintiff through a trustee when the plaintiff was a child of approximately eight years of age, and that he made a parol gift of all proceeds from the land to his mother at that time. The jury was authorized to find that the plaintiff’s mother and the defendant had entered into an agreement whereby the defendant was to pay a specified number of bales of cotton annually as rent for the property; that this agreement was made prior to the time the plaintiff’s mother deeded the property to him; and that the rental arrangement had continued up until the time of his mother’s death. Under these circumstances, the relationship of landlord and tenant between the plaintiff and the defendant would have arisen by operation of law at the time he acquired title to the property. Morrow v. Sawyer, 82 Ga. 226 (8 S. E. 51).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.E.2d 451, 92 Ga. App. 339, 1955 Ga. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-day-gactapp-1955.