Hendricks v. Allen

57 S.E. 224, 128 Ga. 181, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 57 S.E. 224 (Hendricks v. Allen) 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
Hendricks v. Allen, 57 S.E. 224, 128 Ga. 181, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 62 (Ga. 1907).

Opinion

Beck, J.

(After stating the facts.)

1. The motion for a new trial in this ease embraces numerous [183]*183grounds which, it will not be necessary for us to examine and discuss in detail, because a new trial is to be granted for the reason that the portions of the charge excepted to show that the court submitted the case to the jury upon a theory or theories that were not authorized by the pleadings or the evidence. That the charge of our able and learned brother of the trial bench is open to this criticism is, doubtless, largely due to the vague and indefinite allegations in the plaintiff’s petition upon which he rests his .right to the relief sought. In the second paragraph of the petition it is alleged, that “said land (the land in controversy) was then purchased from Valentine Kahn [and others] for said sum of $135 by petitioner, and a deed was executed to said land in favor of petitioner, according to petitioner’s understanding, and was to be kept in the possession of said Locke until petitioner should pay off said loan which said Locke had procured from said Nelson for petitioner, to purchase said land as above stated.” It will be observed that while the plaintiff avers that the deed “was executed to said land in favor of petitioner, according to petitioner’s understanding,” he neglects and fails to state with whom he had this understanding; and this omission is nowhere, in the course of the petition, supplied. Whether it was with Locke, or with Nelson, or with the vendors of the land, we are left to conjecture. The plaintiff, as we see from the statement of facts, never distinctly alleges that a deed conveying the land to him was ever executed by the vendors, and that it was destroyed, and does not admit in his pleadings that such a deed was ever executed. But after having charged that, “according to his understanding,” such a deed was executed, he alleges that Locke’s administrator “claims to petitioner that he has been unable to find such a deed;” and he leaves it to the trial court and to this court to surmise as to whether this is to be accepted as an allegation that no such deed had been executed, or that there was a deed, as a part of a fraudulent scheme, as is sought to be set up, but the parties to which are nowhere clearly revealed. Though the petition does complain that the deed executed by Nelson to Locke was a fraud on petitioner, and that the deed from the vendors of the land to Nelson was a fraud on petitioner, the plaintiff concludes his petition, not with a prayer for the cancellation of the deed from the vendors of the land to Nelson, and of Nelson’s deed to Locke, but with a prayer for the cancellation of the mortgage [184]*184from Locke to Hendricks, and that Locke’s administrator be required to make petitioner''“good and sufficient titles to said property.” ....

The plaintiff in error in his motion for a new trial, among other grounds, complains of the following portion of the court’s charge: “There are really but two main propositions of law in the case. The first is this, that if you believe that the truth of the case is that Allen originally purchased this land as set up by him in his petition, and that he purchased it with money that was borrowed for him by Locke, and that,, in order to secure the person from whom that loan was made, the title was taken in such person, and that Allen went into the possession of the land as soon as- it was purchased, claiming it as his own, and that subsequently Nelson himself was repaid for that money, and that then the title was conveyed to Locke for the purpose of indemnifying him and securing him against the security he had stood for, material which had been purchased for the purpose of building a house upon that land, then Allen being in possession of that land, whenever he repaid to Locke and to Nelson the amount of money he had borrowed upon that land, he had a perfect equitable title to that property, which is entitled to be respected and protected in a court of equity.” It is contended that this charge was error, because “ (1) it was not adapted to either the -plaintiff’s pleadings or the evidence in the ease; (2) plaintiff’s case as set forth in his petition was not predicated upon the idea that the title was taken in the person from whom money was borrowed by Locke as security for the loan, and that the title was conveyed to Locke to indemnify him fox security he had stood for. Such theory is expressly negatived by the petition, which is predicated on the theory that the title was to be made directly from Kahn and others to plaintiff, and that not only was the making of the title from Kahn and others to Nelson and from Nelson to Locke not a part Of the contract, agreement, or understanding, but, on the contrary, was an actual fraud on the plaintiff; (3) there is no evidence whatever that ‘in order to secure the person from whom that loan was made, the title was taken in such person,’ nor is there any allegation that could have sustained such evidence; (4) there is no evidence whatever that when Nelson was repaid, ‘the title was conveyed to Locke for the purpose of indemnifying him and securing him against the security he had stood for.’ ” [185]*185Exception was also taken to the following charge of the court: “If you believe these facts to be the truth of the case and established by the testimony in the case, and believe it further to be the truth that the time when Hendricks made a loan to Locke, or Locke gave as security for that loan a mortgage on the real estate sued for in this case, that at that time Allen was in possession of said real estate, claiming it as his own, under a contract of purchase from Locke of that real estate, then the equity of Allen, as the party in possession under a contract of purchase, would be superior equity to that of Hendricks.” It is complained that this portion of the charge was error, “(1) because there was no evidence whatever that Allen was in possession of the real estate, claiming it as his own, under a contract of purchase from Locke; and (2) because said charge proceeded upon a theory in conflict with the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, in that plaintiff’s petition negatived the idea of the purchase of the land by him from Locke.”

. These exceptions, each and all, are well taken, especially when we consider that nowhere in the charge was the issue of fraud in the execution of the said deeds to Locke and Nelson even referred to.

The case alleged sounds in fraud; fraud is the essence of it. After alleging, that Locke borrowed money “for petitioner to purchase said land,” that the land was then purchased from Kahn and others by petitioner, and “a deed was executed to said land in favor of petitioner, according to petitioner’s understanding,” and that he discovered that deeds were made from Kahn and others to Nelson,' and from Nelson to Locke, the allegation is made, as we have seen before, that said deeds were a fraud on petitioner. But there is no evidence of any contract, agreement, or understanding between Allen and Locke concerning the purchase of that land. If Locke borrowed money for the purchase of the land and was responsible for the repayment thereof, it can hardly have been a fraud on his part to take a deed to it to secure'himself, in the absence of a contract or agreement to the contrary. No further discussion is needed to show that the plaintiff’s case as stated by him in his petition was not submitted to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 S.E. 224, 128 Ga. 181, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-allen-ga-1907.