Garrard v. Hull & Tobin

20 S.E. 357, 92 Ga. 787
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 357 (Garrard v. Hull & Tobin) 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
Garrard v. Hull & Tobin, 20 S.E. 357, 92 Ga. 787 (Ga. 1894).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

This was a claim ease in which Hull & Tobin, survivors of the firm of George R. Sibley & Co., were plaintiffs in execution, and Mrs. Ann E. Garrard was the claimant. The defendants in fi.fa. were Pierce & Culver, and L. Pierce and G. P. Culver. The jury found for the claimant, and the court granted a new trial.

1. It appears beyond dispute that in 1881 Beverly Amos owned a tract of land known as the “Lawson place.” On the first day of January, 1882, Amos conveyed this land to Pierce, Little & Co. On the 17th of March, 1883, W. F. Little, W. A. Buckner and G. P. Culver, members of the firm of Pierce, Little & Co., quitclaimed to Lovick Pierce, who was the remaining member of this firm, their entire interest in this land. On the 9th of April, 1885, Pierce and Culver made a deed conveying the land to George R. Sibley & Co., predecessors of Hull & Tobin, which deed was recorded on the 8th day of April, 1886. It does not appear why Culver’s name was affixed to this deeed, the entire title at the time of its execution being, apparently, - in Lovick Pierce alone; but this is immaterial, and indeed, in the argu[789]*789ment here, this deed was treated by counsel on both sides as a conveyance from Pierce to Sibley & Co. It was made to secure a debt which was afterwards reduced to judgment in favor of Hull & Tobin, survivors of Sibley & Co. There was also in evidence a deed from Sibley & Co., to the defendants in execution, dated October 18, 1888, and recorded October 24th, 1888, which contained the following recital: “ This deed being executed as directed by the judgment and decree of the superior court of said Hancock county, in the case of Hull & Tobin, survivors of George R. Sibley &’ Co. vs. Pierce & Culver, that the execution founded on the judgment rendered in said case against said Pierce & Culver might be levied on said land, and the same be sold in satisfaction thereof, in preference to all other claims.”

In 1887, Mrs. Garrard filed a bill against Beverly Amos, Lovick Pierce and others, alleging that the land in question was her property, and praying that Amos be required to make her a deed to the same, and that the two deeds first above mentioned be cancelled. Sibley & Company were not made parties to this bill, nor was there any allegation therein as to the deed from Pierce and Culver to them. At the October term, 1888, this bill was dismissed on general demurrer. In the argument here, it was insisted that this dismissal was an adjudication that the title to this land was not in the complainant, Mrs. Garrard; that this adjudication was binding upon her in the present controversy, and therefore, as between herself and Hull & Tobin, the question of title was res adjudícala. Whatever.may have been the effect of the dismissal of the bill as between Mrs. Garrard and the defendants in that bill, certainly nothing was thereby adjudicated as between herself and the plaintiffs in execution in the present case. It must be borne in mind that the conveyance from Pierce and Culver to Sibley & Co. was made before the bill of Mrs. [790]*790Garrard was even filed, and therefore, relatively to that bill and the decree thereon, there is no privity whatever between the grantees in that deed and the defendants to the bill. If the bill had resulted in a decree in Mrs. Garrard’s favor, it could not be contended that Sibley & Co., or their successors in title, would be estopped by it. Not having been parties to the bill, they were in no way bound by an adjudication against their predecessors in title, rendered in a proceeding not instituted till after the deed to Sibley & Co. was made. Whatever may have been the equities existing between Mrs. Garrard and Pierce and Culver with reference to this land, Sibley & Co., and their successors, could not be affected, one way or the other, by the result of litigation over matters upon which they had not been heard and as to which they were in no legal sense concerned. If, as between Sibley & Co. and Mrs. Garrard, the former would not have been bound by a decree in her favor upon the bill she filed, it is perfectly clear that as to them Mrs. Garrard is not estopped by the dismissal of the bill. The litigation between herself and the respondents in that bill was, as to Sibley & Co., res inter alios acta; and of course, Hull & Tobin stand in the same position as Sibley & Co. would have stood. The proposition that the question of title, as between the claimant and the plain-: tiffs in execution, is not res adjudieata because of the disposition made of the above mentioned bill, is to our minds absolutely free from difficulty, and, in our opinion, requires no further argument.

In this connection, the court charged the jury as follows : “ If you believe from the evidence that the bill filed by Ann E. Garrard against Pierce, Little & Co. and L. Pierce covered the subject-matter of this litigation; and if you further believe that the same issues involved in this case were actually adjudicated by the court in that case; and if you further believe that the present [791]*791plaintiffs in fi. fa., though not parties to that case, are the vendees of L. Pierce under a deed made to secure a -debt, and that the title is yet vested in L. Pierce, then the former judgment is conclusive of the questions involved, or that could or should have been presented by due diligence; and such judgment would in that event be conclusive between the parties thereto, and be conclusive between the claimant and the vendee of L. Pierce, to wit Hull & Tobin, and you would be authorized to find the property subject.” In view of what has been stated above, this charge was error. Whether, as between the parties to the present case, the question of title was res adjudicata should not have been submitted to the jury at all. On the contrary, the court should have held outright that Mrs. Garrard, so far as the plaintiffs in execution are concerned, was not estopped, by the dismissal of her bill in the former ease, from set-ling up title to the land in dispute.

2. The error above pointed out, being against the •claimant, would be no cause for setting aside a verdict in her favor. Upon the actual merits, however, the verdict was wrong, and the court properly granted a new trial. It appeared beyond controversy that at the time the deed of Pierce and Culver was made to Geoi-ge R. Sibley & Co., they took it without knowledge or notice of any kind that Mrs. Garrard either owned, or claimed to own, the land. They were, in the strictest sense, bona fide purchasers for value and without notice of the secret equity set up by the claimant. The evideuee also shows conclusively that neither Mrs. Garrard nor her husband at that time had, or had ever held, the legal title to the land. The fact that they were living together upon it was the only circumstance tending in the least •degree to convey notice that there was any defect or infirmity in the title conveyed to Sibley & Co. This fact was not of itself sufficient to defeat the perfect legal [792]*792title which the latter acquired, the more especially when inquiry on their part would have shown that Mr. Garrard occupied the land as the tenant of Lovick Pierce, recognized him as his landlord, and paid, or agreed to pay, him rent for the land. Pierce’s title was therefore perfectly consistent with Garrard’s tenancy ; but that tenancy was entirely inconsistent with his wife’s alleged equity.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 357, 92 Ga. 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrard-v-hull-tobin-ga-1894.