Dover v. Burns

196 S.E. 785, 186 Ga. 19, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 545
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 11, 1938
DocketNo. 12140
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 196 S.E. 785 (Dover v. Burns) 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
Dover v. Burns, 196 S.E. 785, 186 Ga. 19, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 545 (Ga. 1938).

Opinion

Gbice, Justice.

The plaintiff contends that she is entitled to [25]*25have reformed the writing of February 6, 1930, which was entered into by her through her attorney in fact, B. F. Scott, and the defendants Burns. First, she insists that it was entered into by the mistake on her part, due to the fraud of the defendants Burns. Fraud is thus defined: “Fraud may be actual or constructive. Actual fraud consists in any kind of artifice by which another is deceived. Constructive fraud consists in any act of omission or commission, contrary to legal or equitable duty, trust, or confidence justly reposed, which is contrary to good conscience and operates to the injury of another. The former implies moral guilt; the latter may be consistent with innocence.” Code, § 37-702. “Misrepresentation of a material fact, made wilfully to deceive, or recklessly without knowledge, and acted on by the opposite party, or if made by mistake and innocently, and acted on by the opposite party, constitutes legal fraud.” • § 37-703. The plaintiff urges that the defendants Burns perpetrated a fraud upon her by having her execute the power of attorney giving her son-in-law, B. F. Scott, the authority to negotiate the adjustment of the misappropriation of the money, they orally representing to her that they were going to pay it personally themselves. It is not alleged how and by what means the defendants Burns defrauded the plaintiff in the execution of this power of attorney, other than oral representations. There was no confidential relationship existing between the plaintiff and the defendants Burns which would entitle her to rely upon their statements to her. So far as this record shows, she had never seen either of the defendants Burns before they talked with her in November about the shortage. Their sister was the wife of the man who, she charged, had taken her money. When she talked with them she knew that they were not looking out for her (the plaintiff’s) interests, but for those of Erwin or their sister — all interests adverse to the plaintiff’s. The reason for the rule that a party to a confidential or fiduciary relationship may rely upon representations made is that by the very terms or circumstances of the arrangement of dealings between the parties there rests upon the party acting for another the duty of protecting and furthering the interests of the person for whom he is acting, not those of himself or of any one else. The person so placing trust in him by virtue of this confidential relationship is justified by the situation of this interest in believing that the other party will act fairly [26]*26and make true representations. The fact that it is alleged that the plaintiff reposed trust and confidence in the defendants Burns does not create a confidential relationship. In the majority of business dealings, opposite parties have trust and confidence in each other’s integrity, but there is no confidential relationship by this alone. This state of facts does not bring the plaintiff within the protection of the Code, § 37-707, with reference to confidential relationships. It is not alleged that the attorney in fact selected was in any way illiterate or uneducated, or in any way unsuited to look out for his mother-in-law’s interests, other than the allegation that he “was unlearned in law and in the interpretation and construction of contracts, all of which was fully known to said Henry K. Burns and Hubert M. Burns.”

The language of Mr. Justice Beck, in Baker v. Patton, 144 Ga. 502 (87 S. E. 659), is significant here: “He went no farther in this direction than to aver that he ‘is an uneducated man, with little experience in commercial life and the handling of negotiable instruments, and because of his want of education and experience did not know the meaning of the words, “without recourse.”’ There is a wide difference between an allegation that one is illiterate and an allegation to the effect that he is ‘an uneducated man.’ A man might be able to read and write, carry on a business correspondence, understand business transactions, and be bound by all his contracts, and yet be an uneducated man. As all of us know, a very large percentage of successful business men who every day enter into important contracts are uneducated men; and a mere allegation that petitioner was an uneducated man, in a petir tion like that which we have under consideration, falls far short of an allegation that he is illiterate, and it is unnecessary to quote definitions given by the lexicographers to show this. The mere fact that petitioner was ignorant of the meaning and import of the expression ‘without recourse ’ can not be the ground of affording him relief and reforming the contract.” It is not alleged that there was any collusion between Scott and the defendants Burnsj The fair inference from the facts in the petition and the proffered amendment is that the defendants realized that the plaintiff was old, infirm, and incapable of taking care of her interests in the transaction, and suggested that she name her own daughter’s husband to represent her. Such could not be the basis of fraud to authorize a court to reform the writing.

[27]*27As a further act of fraud by the defendants Bums, she alleges that they orally represented falsely and -wilfully to the attorney in fact for the plaintiff that the written agreement which they were about to execute, which agreement the defendants had prepared, was an individual undertaking and promise on the part of themselves personally to pay the shortage to the plaintiff, and was one which covered all of the plaintiff’s demands, while in truth it was only an agreement by the defendants Burns acting on behalf of Erwin to include only part of her demands. Again, there is no allegation that Scott could not read, or that there was any trick or artifice preventing him from reading or from doing what men do ordinarily in executing contracts. The agreement bears the names of two persons as witnesses, one an ordinary witness, and another a justice of the peace. No reason is shown why, if Scott did not understand the writing, he could not have asked these men or have gotten some one else to advise him of the rights of the plaintiff as set out in the writing. The record fails to disclose any facts showing that the parties were anything except acquaintances to each other, all laymen and in the possession of the usual faculties. No fiduciary relationship is set out. Any disparity in age, mental ability or the like, which may have existed between the plaintiff and the defendants Burns is not to be considered, since the plaintiff delegated to Scott the authority to act for her. The precise question presented here has been decided in such effective terms by this court that we give it verbatim: “Equity will not reform a written contract because of mistake as to the contents of the writing on the part of the complaining party (who was able to read), and fraud of the other party which consists only in making false representations as to such contents, on which the complaining party relied as true because of confidence in the party making them, no fiduciary or confidential relation existing between the parties, and no sufficient excuse appearing why the complaining party did not read the contract.” Weaver v. Roberson, 134 Ga. 149 (67 S. E. 662). We hold, therefore, that-there is not sufficient allegation of fraud in the original petition or in the amendment offered to reform the writing of February 6, 1930.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.E. 785, 186 Ga. 19, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dover-v-burns-ga-1938.