Green v. Mann

76 Ga. 246, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 490
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 2, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 76 Ga. 246 (Green v. Mann) 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
Green v. Mann, 76 Ga. 246, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 490 (Ga. 1886).

Opinion

[248]*248Hall, Justice.

' With the claim, the party making it set up equitable grounds of relief, and converted the ordinary proceeding at law substantially into a bill in equity. The case made was that claimant’s husband, Green, and J. M. Johnson purchased jointly of the plaintiff in execution, Mann, a tract of land for the sum of $5,000, one-half cash and the other oil time; that Green made the cash payment and joined Johnson in a note for the balance of the purchase money Mann conveyed the premises to them jointly and they afterwards divided them between themselves, each taking from the other a conveyance for the part assigned to him. After the maturity of the note given for the purchase money, a suit was instituted thereon against both the makers, which resulted in a judgment against them jointly; the execution issuing on this judgment was levied on the portion of the land which, in the division, was assigned to Johnson, and when sold under this levy, it brought a very inadequate price, less than one-half its value; had it been sold for what it was reasonably worth and what it would have brought at a fair sale, it would have satisfied the execution, the full amount of which, both legally and equitably, was chargeable to Johnson, Green having paid his portion of the joint indebtedness for the purchase of the land. But it was not fairly sold, as alleged, -because by an arrangement between Johnson and Mann it was agreed that the latter should bid it off for the benefit of the former, who was to have time to redeem it; that in consequence of this agreement and the representations of Mann to others, persons attending the sale were deterred from bidding, which otherwise they would have donp’, and' made the property bring, if not a fair price, at least enough to have satisfied the execution, A homestead Out of Green’s part of the land was set apart to his family, and hence the wife interpos.ed this claim, not only for herself, but for her minor children; the husband was not made a [249]*249party to this equitable proceeding, otherwise than he appears to be such as a defendant in the execution.

Under the charge of the court and its various rulings, the property was found subject, and the claimant moved for a new trial on a number of grounds, which was refused. She thereupon excepted to the judgment overruling this motion and brought the case here on writ of error.

It is unnecessary to go at length into the’ many questions raised by this record, as the determination of those on which the case must turn will, for present purposes, dispose of it. There was certainly evidence to sustain the claim set up to relief from this judgment debt, and there was likewise testimony that the jury might have deemed sufficient to rebut it, and had the finding rested solely on the evidence, we might not have felt authorized to interfere with the discretion of the court in refusing to disturb the verdict. Such, however, is not the character of the claimant’s complaint; she insists that the judge erred in several of his charges to the jury upon points vital to her case, and thereby deprived her of rights to which, under the law, she was entitled, and especially that there was error in the instructions given the jury, particularly in ■those set out in the 6th, 8th, 9th and 10th grounds of the motion for a new trial, as follows:

(6.) The court' erred in this charge to the jury: “ If you find that Mann had a contract with Johnson to favor Johnson any way, the court charges you that the making of such contract ox agreement could not be fraudulent as to Johnson,, defendant, or to Green, claimant, who is here insisting ihefi.fa. was satisfied as to Johnson, and being satisfied as to him, is satisfied as to her husband, who was jointly liable for the payment of this debt. I know of no rule of law or policy which forbids a plaintiff vn.fi. fa. from making a contract to favor the debtor, and such contracts, if made and published by the plaintiff or debtor, and even if it had the effect to depress the bidding, would not give tho debtor, or those claiming under him, the right to attack the sale.”

[250]*250(8.) The court erred in charging the jury, at the request of plaintiff’s counsel, the same being unauthorized by the evidence, “If you find that Mann, before the sale, had promised Johnson to buy in the land if it did not go over $4,000, and give him his own time to redeem it, or anything to that effect, Johnson and Mann had the right to modify or change the contract in any respect they saw proper after the sale, and if they did make another contract after the sale, fixing the rights of each of them, this Writing did away with the previous verbal contract and the writing determined,- and is the sole, measure of the rights of the parties.” This charge was wrong for Green; a joint debtor had some rights in the property.

(9.) The court erred in charging, “Neither the defendant, Green, nor the claimant has or can have any rights growing out of the contract between Mann and Johnson greater or different from what Johnson himself had under said contract.”

(10.) The court erred in charging, “ If you find that the contract was made between Mann and Johnson, as testified to by Johnson, to the effect that Mann was to bid off the property for Johnson at a stipulated price, and hold it and give Johnson his own time to redeem the same, I charge you that Mann and Johnson had the right to make such a contract, and the making thereof would be no fraud on Green’s rights, and if you find that Mann and Johnson, or either of them, simply told Reeves, before the sale, of the fact that such contract was made, without more, and that on the hearing of that fact, of his own accord, declined to bid for the land, this of itself would not constitute a fraud on Green, or entitle him or claimant to any redi;ess against Mann in this case.” The court had no right to express or intimate its opinion xxpon what had or had not been proved, or the weight of the evidence.

The leading purpose of these several instructions and the effect they had upon the case would seem to be to withdraw from the consideration of the jury all right and [251]*251interest which the defendant, Green, and the claimant under him, had in the appropriation of the portion of the land assigned his co-defendant, Johnson, and to make it liable for the payment of the execution with which it was primai’ily chargeable, without recourse upon him under the law. They also prevented the jury from considering the facts testified to as evidence of a purpose, on the part of Mann and his alleged confederate, to divert from its proper application the proceeds arising from a fair sale of the land in fraud of the rights of the defendant, Green. The real point to be settled was, did Mann, by~ his dealings with Johnson, deprive Green of the right and power of subjecting Johnson’s property to the payment of the balance due on this execution, and did he do that with a knowledge that Green had already paid his proportionate part of the debt, and that the land had been divided between him and Johnson, for the purpose of severing their joint interest, and fixing the liability of each of them, as between themselves, as to the payment of this execution deht? Did he, by any of his contracts with Johnson, to which Green was no party, so depress the sale of the land that it failed to bring a sufficient amount to satisfy the demand he held against them ? If such are the facts, and they shall be so found by the jury, we think there can be no doubt of Green’s discharge from this liability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Ga. 246, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-mann-ga-1886.