Harris v. Collins

75 Ga. 97
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 Ga. 97 (Harris v. Collins) 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
Harris v. Collins, 75 Ga. 97 (Ga. 1886).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

The complainant exhibited his bill for the specific performance of a contract alleged to have been made by the defendant, Ann Maria Harris, and her husband and trustee, Daniel Harris, for the sale and conveyance to him of a certain lot in the “ Northern Liberties” of the city of Oolumbus. This was a parol contract entered into in 18S0. Under it the complainant went into possession of the premises immediately, improved the same, erected a dwelling thereon, paid taxes therefor, has since been in possession, and has paid all the purchase money except a trifling sum, which he tendered and continues to tender, but which has been refused. He has demanded a conveyance from the defendants, which has been likewise refused. The bill prays discovery and propounds several interrogatories.

The defendants answered, and on the trial, issues of fact only were submitted to the jury, and upon their finding of these several issues, the court decreed a specific execution of the contract in favor of the complainant. In response to the first question submitted, the jury found that Daniel Harris sold the premises to complainant; to the second, they found that complainant had paid seventy dollars of the purchase money; to the third, that he tendered the balance ($4.00); to the fourth, that Ann Maria Harris, the cestui [104]*104que truat, authorized' her trustee to sell the property; and to the fifth, that complainant did not, at the time he purchased, know that it was trust property he was buying.

To these several responses the defendants excepted, and moved for a new trial, not only upon the general grounds, but upon special grounds, which embraced quite a number of exceptions to the various rulings and charges of the court.

1. The general character of the defence is such that it does not commend itself very highly to the regard of a court of equity. There is not much doubt that this ignorant and illiterate complainant purchased this property with the full belief that he was acquiring a perfect and Unincumbered title, and that such were the representations made to induce him to purchase, by parties in whom he confided. There is as little doubt that he dealt with a person who was appointed agent by Daniel Harris, as the trustee of his wife, and that he authorized this agent to sell, though not to convey this land. This he intended to do himself, for he left deeds with another party, and directed them to be turned over to the agent, upon a compliance with the terms of contracts which this agent had made or might make for the sales of land. This is apparent from Harris’s correspondence with Yonge & Grimes, the real estate agents whom he subsequently employed to attend to these matters after this sale was made; and had there not been a difference between them as to the compensation, Turner, the agent, was to receive for the services he rendered in making this and other sales of the adjacent lands committed to him for that purpose, this controversy might not have arisen. It is quite apparent, from this correspondence with Yonge & Grimes, that he did not look after the payment of tax on this and other lands sold by the agent in the years 1880 and 1881; at that time, the complainant had been in possession for nearly two years, and had improved the land, treating it as his own and paying the taxes assessed upon it; then it was that Harris be[105]*105came anxious to redeem it from this charge, and for the first time manifested any concern about the matter. Besides the answers set up, as the sole ground of defence, that he, under the trust deed covering the land, had no right to sell or convey it, except by the written consent of the cestui que trust. As to all other facts, the statements therein, so far as they relate to their transactions, through their agent, are of the most sweeping and general character. Neither of these answers goes into detail, and each seems carefully and studiously to avoid any of the facts and cir-. cumstances involved in and attending these particular dealings.

It might not be going out of the way1 to suggest that an answer thus framed is not free from suspicion. One of the indicia of fraud laid down in Twyne’s case, and which has since been recognized, is thatt£ it lurks in generalities;” it is often concealed by having a broad mantle drawn over it. In the significant, but often quoted language of our own Oode, §2751, “Fraud may not be presumed, but being in itself subtle, slight circumstances may be sufficient to carry conviction of its existence.” Another prominent fact from which the jury might have been justified not only in inferring the existence of fraud, but might likewise have presumed notice of the transaction to the defendants, was the length of time the complainant was in the open, notorious and adverse possession of the property, claiming it as his own, and improving it in a manner and to an extent that no one but the owner would be likely to do; that during that entire period, they had an agent residing in Columbus, who, so far from giving any warning to desist, encouraged the complainant to proceed, as may be inferred from his silence and acquiescence, if not from his acts in receiving the-various installments of purchase money as they fell due.

There is, therefore, no want of evidence to overcome defendants’ answers, or to justify and sustain the finding of the jury on the several issues of fact submitted to them. The decree was in accordance with the verdict and the [106]*106other proofs, as well as the pleadings in the case, and the defendants’ general exceptions thereto, even if they had been more specific, would not have been well founded.

2. The proposition that a power is to be strictly pursued in its execution, and that the mode and manner specified in the instrument creating it for its performance must be followed, is well settled, and was not controverted; but it was insisted that this rule was applicable to cases in which the party claimed title in virtue of a sale under the power, and not to one in which he claimed adversely thereto, and where it was used to deceive and mislead him to his injury, or where, with like intent, it was artfully concealed from him, and he was induced to purchase in ignorance of its existence, and consequently of the incumbrance it put upon his right. The law wisely places persons non sui juris under disabilities for the purpose of protecting their rights, but not to enable them to invade or assail the rights of others. As was well remarked by Warner, J., in Strain, adm'r, vs. Wright, 7 Ga., 572, ‘‘the privilege is to be used as a shield and not as a sword.” The person cannot have the benefit of the contract, on the one side, without returning the equivalent, on the other. Here the party not only retains the benefit of the money paid to the agent of her trustee, but likewise the improvements made on the land and its greatly enhanced value on account of the same, and makes no offer of any recompense for either to one who honestly became a purchaser without notice of the rights now set up against him.

The question propounded by the court to the jury exactly covered the case, while that which defendants’counsel requested to have propounded presented the issue made on the testimony only partially, viz., that defendant, Ann Maria Harris, owned the property in dispute under the deed of trust, and that it could not be sold by Daniel Harris, her trustee, without her consent and request in writing, and if that consent or request was not had in writing, then her trustee could not sell the property. The [107]

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ga. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-collins-ga-1886.