Crawford v. Crawford

67 S.E. 673, 134 Ga. 114, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 23, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 673 (Crawford v. Crawford) 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
Crawford v. Crawford, 67 S.E. 673, 134 Ga. 114, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 130 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Holden, J.

(After stating the facts.) 1. The fact that the plaintiff and the defendant are brothers does not of itself create a confidential or fiduciary relation between them. There is no presumption that such relation exists between brothers, arising solely from the fact that they are so related. If a confidential or fiduciary relation exists between brothers, it must be shown by proof, and the burden is upon the party asserting the existence of such relationship to affirmatively show the same. The facts that the defendant is six years the senior of the plaintiff, that they were reared together, and that the plaintiff attended a school taught by the defendant, are not sufficient to establish a confidential or fiduciary relation between them. Nothing appears showing a controlling influence by the defendant over the will, conduct, and interests of the plaintiff, nor does it appear that any trust relation existed between them, such as that of partners, or principal and agent, nor any other relation which would warrant the conclusion that they occupied towards each other what is known in law as a confidential relation. It appears from the position that the plaintiff came to Atlanta some years prior to the transaction complained of, for the purpose of practicing the medical profession, which would indicate that at the time the transaction occurred, on which the suit is predicated, the plaintiff was not only a man of mature years, but engaged in a profession the practice of which requires more than ordinary intellectual capacity. On the subject of confidential relations, see Civil Code, § 4030; Shevlin v. Shevlin, 96 Minn. 398 (105 N. W. 257) ; Smith on Fraud, § 103.

2. In the briefs filed by counsel for the defendant in error it is insisted that the plaintiff is barred from his action in any event, inasmuch as the facts giving rise thereto were discovered in 1903 and suit was not commenced until 1906, three years thereafter. They contend that the statute of limitations applicable to the case is that prescribed in the Civil Code, § 3900, which requires [120]*120the bringing of actions “for injuries done to the person” within two years after the right of action accrues. We do not consider that deceit practiced upon another whereby he is simply induced to incur a financial loss can be classed as an “injury done to the person.” Counsel cite the cases of Johnson v. Bradstreet Company, 87 Ga. 79 (13 S. E. 250) ; Hutcherson v. Durden, 113 Ga. 987 (39 S. E. 495, 54 L. R. A. 811) ; Gordon v. West, 129 Ga. 532 (59 S. E. 232, 13 L. R. A. (N S.) 549), which they contend make it appear that deceit is an injury to the person. The Johnson case, supra, was an action for libel, and this character of action was held to be an action for injury to the person, so as to fall within the provision of law that no action “for homicide, injury to person, or injury to property shall abate by death.” In the Hutcherson case, supra, it was ruled that an action for seduction was for an injury “done to the person,” and was barred unless brought within two years after the accrual of the right of action. And in the Gordon case, supra, a similar ruling was made with respect to an action for false imprisonment, malicious use of process, or malicious abuse of process. All wrongs of the character dealt with in these decisions involve an infringment of one of the primary rights of man, namely, that of “security of person.” This class of wrongs, notwithstanding the fact that the person upon whom they are inflicted may not suffer any actual physical injury, necessarily violate the right of the injured party to protection in the security of his person; and, as was pointed out in the cases above cited, are properly classed as “injuries to the person.” Mr. Hilliard, in his work on Torts, classifies separately “Torts to Persons” and “Torts to Property,” treating among the former wrongs of the same and kindred nature with those dealt with in the decisions referred to supra, while among the latter he includes “Fraud” as a wrong to property. “Deceit” is, of course, a species of fraud. See 1 Hill. Torts, 464; 2 Id. 137. We can conceive of instances where fraud and deceit practiced on another would result in an injury to the person; and perhaps it was for this reason that, in arranging the divisions of our Civil Code, fraud and deceit were dealt with in the chapter (Title 9, Ch. 1, Civil Code of 1895), headed “Injuries to Person or Property.” In a New York case (Cleveland v. Barrows, 59 Barb. 364), which involved an action for fraud and deceit, the contention was made that “The term [121]*121‘injury to property/ as used in the code; must be construed to mean a direct, corporeal damage or wrong done to specific property, and not to the mere personal rights, or ‘rights of property.’ ” On p. 374, the court said: “By referring to the cause of action as stated in the complaint, it will be seen that it is there alleged that in consequence of the defendant’s false and fraudulent statements and representations, the plaintiff was induced to pay, and did pay, $1,900 for the property which was not worth at the time over $900. The presumption is, from the allegations in the complaint, that the plaintiff, paid the purchase price in money. What he has paid, therefore, over and above the value of the property purchased, the defendant has obtained wrongfully, by means of his fraud. Fraud is a wrong, and if a party thereby obtains, from another, property, it is an injury to the property of such other, in the same sense, precisely, as though the wrong-doer had taken the property tortiously and converted it.”

In Broom’s Common Law (9th ed.), 782, it is said: “Torts to the Person, . . include — 1. Bodily injuries, whether direct, as assault and battery, or consequential, resulting from negligence or otherwise; 2. Injuries to the health or comfort of an individual; 3. Torts which affect personal liberty.” On page 912 of the same work, when speaking of “Torts to Personal Property,” the following text is employed: “It may readily be conceded, that where a rightful possession of goods and chattels has once been gained, either by a just occupancy or by a legal transfer, whoever, whether by force or fraud, dispossesses the holder of them is guilty of a tort, remediable by action; ‘for/ as remarked by Blackstone, ‘there must be an end of all social commerce between man and man unless private possession be secured from unjust invasions; and if an acquisition of goods by either force or fraud were allowed to be a sufficient title, all property would soon be confined to the most strong or the most cunning; and the weak and simple-minded part of mankind (which is by far the most numerous division) could never be secure of their possessions.”

The act of 17G7, prescribing certain limitations for actions (Cobb’s Dig. 559) made no reference to injuries to either person or property. It created a bar of four years for “actions upon the case,” and this was the class of actions in which at common law relief might be had for damages resulting from fraud and deceit. [122]*122Bishop’s Non-Contract Law, § 343. Under that act, therefore, an action of the character we are now dealing with would not have been barred until the expiration of four years from the accrual of the right of action; and four years was treated as the period of limitation governing an action for deceit in the sale of promissory notes with a representation of the maker’s solvency, in a case decided by this court in which the right of action accrued while the act of 1767 was of force.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 673, 134 Ga. 114, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-crawford-ga-1910.