Gilmore v. Hunt

73 S.E. 364, 137 Ga. 272, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 364 (Gilmore v. Hunt) 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
Gilmore v. Hunt, 73 S.E. 364, 137 Ga. 272, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 379 (Ga. 1911).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

Polly Ann Hunt filed her petition against George T. Gilmore and his wife, making substantially the following allegations : During the night of December 11, 1906, George T. Gilmore brought with him three other men, one of whom was an officer authorized to make arrests, to the home of the plaintiff and demanded that D. H. Hunt, her husband, pay a debt due by him to said Gilmore. “The said Gilmore exhibited a criminal warrant sworn out by said Gilmore, charging said D. H. Hunt with larceny after trust, and threatened to have the same then and there executed unless said indebtedness was then and there settled and satisfied. The said Gilmore suggested and demanded that petitioner execute the aforesaid deed [a deed hereinafter referred to] in settlement of the indebtedness of said D. H. Hunt; and acting under stress of the surroundings and circumstances, and being coerced by the fears of said threatened criminal prosecution against her hus[273]*273band, and being moved by the importunities of her husband and the demands, coupled with said threats, of the said Gilmore, petitioner authorized her name to be signed to said deed, which had already been prepared by said George T. Gilmore.” Her deed was made to the wife of George T. Gilmore upop a stated consideration of $300, and contained a warranty of title; and it was duly recorded. The only consideration of the deed was the settlement of a debt due by the plaintiff’s husband to George T. Gilmore. “The said defendant, George T. Gilmore, knew at the time that the land described in said deed was the property of petitioner, and that -her husband, D. H. Hunt, had no interest therein; and he knew -that said deed was given for the sole purpose of paying a debt of petitioner’s husband for which petitioner was in no wise liable or responsible.” The defendants are in possession of the land which the deed purports to convey. In addition to a prayer for process, the prayers of the petition are: that the deed “be, by the judgment and decree of this court, declared null and void, and the same be canceled ; that the said defendants be required to produce said original deed into court, that the same may be canceled by the clerk thereof as a cloud upon petitioner’s title; that petitioner have such other and further general relief as the necessities of the case may require.” A verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants excepted to the overruling of their motion for a new trial, and to the refusal of the court to sustain their demurrer.

1. According to the allegations of the petition, the deed sought to be canceled was without consideration. The deed of a married woman in payment of the debt of her husband is void. Likewise a deed executed under compulsion or duress is not binding upon the maker. It is alleged in the petition, that late at night one of the defendants came to the house of the plaintiff, accompanied by three men, one of whom was an officer, called up her husband from bed, threatening to arrest him for some criminal offense, unless he would procure her to sign a deed; and yielding to her husband’s entreaties, and under fear that their threats of prosecution would be carried into execution, she signed the deed. These circumstances constitute duress. Southern Express Co. v. Duffy, 48 Ga. 358; Crawford v. Cato, 22 Ga. 594; Civil Code (1910), § 4255. It is urged by way of demurrer, that, notwithstanding the deed sought to be canceled may be invalid, according to the allegations of the pe[274]*274tition the plaintiff is not entitled to a decree of cancellation, because she had an adequate remedy at law by ejectment to recover the land. It is true that a married woman may recover possession from her grantee who claims under a deed from her, given in pa3rment of her husband’s debt, without equitable pleadings to cancel it on account of its invalidity. Taylor v. Allen, 112 Ga. 330 (37 S. E. 408); Bond v. Sullivan, 133 Ga. 160 (65 S. E. 376, 134 Am. St. R. 199). There is also an instance of a physical precedent where a plaintiff sued in ejectment, notwithstanding the defendant undertook to defend under a deed from the plaintiff, which the jury found to have been procured by fraud and duress. Findley v. Hulsey, 79 Ga. 670 (4 S. E. 902). However, it is one of the established grounds of equitable jurisdiction to cancel deeds obtained by fraud or other illegal means. Under the common-law practice in ejectment, the issue only comprehended a competition between the titles of the adverse parties. The plaintiff could only recover upon legal title or its equivalent, a perfect equity; and ordinarily it, was a good reply to the plaintiff’s title to exhibit a deed from the plaintiff. In the course of time the practice allowed proof of the invalidity of a deed relied upon as muniment of title; but this practice did not serve to oust equity of its jurisdiction, if the remedy at law was not as adequate as that afforded in equity. In Crawford v. Cato, supra, one of the parties, by means of duress, obtained three promissory notes from the other. He brought his action upon one of them; whereupon the maker filed a bill to restrain that action and to cancel all the notes; and the court held that, as the notes were obtained under duress, a court of equity would relieve the maker by canceling them and by preventing their collection. In Walker v. Hunter, 27 Ga. 336, the defendant was in possession of land under a deed obtained by undue influence; the heirs at law of the maker brought suit to decree its cancellation; and it was held that a court of equity had jurisdiction to cancel a deed without consideration, which was procured by undue influence. In Bond v. Watson, 22 Ga. 637, there was an ejectment suit pending against the defendant, who filed a bill to cancel the deed under which the plaintiff held, on the ground that it had been improperly obtained; and the court held that such an. equitable suit was maintainable, because a court of law had no jurisdiction to set aside and cancel a deed improperly obtained. There can be no doubt that if [275]*275the plaintiff had prayed for a recovery of the land, her suit would have been maintainable. Fulgham v. Pate, 77 Ga. 454. Since the uniform procedure act of 1887, it is competent for the plaintiff to obtain both legal and equitable relief in the same suit; but it does not follow that a plaintiff can not go into a court of equity, where the only relief claimed is of an equitable character. The plaintiff would have a right to go into a court of equity and have the deed canceled, preparatory to filing her action to recover the land, if she elected to prosecute her demands separately. It is no reply to the maintenance of her action for cancellation that she could recover in ejectment without having the deed canceled, for the reason that if she did recover the land her recorded deed would be outstanding against her, and would be a cloud upon her title.' While it may be true, as a general rule, that, in order to maintain a petition to remove a cloud upon a title, the land must be vacant or the plaintiff be in possession, or have no present right of action (Weyman v. Atlanta, 122 Ga. 539 (50 S. E. 492)), nevertheless an action is always maintainable tp cancel a deed procured by fraud or duress, where the legal remedy is not as efficacious as that afforded by a court of equity.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 364, 137 Ga. 272, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-v-hunt-ga-1911.