Hogan v. Brogdon

22 S.E.2d 54, 194 Ga. 474, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 603
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 18, 1942
Docket14097.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 S.E.2d 54 (Hogan v. Brogdon) 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
Hogan v. Brogdon, 22 S.E.2d 54, 194 Ga. 474, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 603 (Ga. 1942).

Opinion

1. In an action of ejectment by an administrator, and a cross-action by the defendants for specific performance of an alleged contract by the decedent to deed to them the land involved, so that title would vest in them at his death, in consideration of certain personal services, the new testimony at the last trial, coupled with testimony similar to that at the previous trial, was sufficient to make a jury issue as to the existence of the alleged contract. There is no merit in the administrator's specific contention that the court properly directed the verdict in his favor because the defendants' proof failed to show certain essentials relating to the contract.

2. As to the defendants' compliance with the alleged contract under which title was to vest in them at the death of the decedent, a finding in their favor was authorized, since there was evidence showing performance of the services required during the lifetime of the decedent before the vesting of title; and there was no evidence that the performance of any service after his death had been made a condition subsequent to divest the previous vesting of title, so as to defeat their right of specific performance by reason of an alleged partial failure to perform an additional service after the decedent's death.

(a) Furthermore, under evidence that the administrator repudiated the alleged contract before any such failure to perform the subsequent service, the right to specific performance would not be defeated by a partial failure after such repudiation.

(b) There is no merit in the administrator's specific contention that the verdict in his favor was properly directed because the defendants did not show any performance of their alleged promise to make permanent improvements on the land during the lifetime of the decedent.

3. Nor is there any merit in the contention that the verdict was properly directed because the alleged contract was barred by the statute of limitations, since the statute was not pleaded and there was no objection to testimony on that ground; and since there was no evidence as to any demand by the defendants for the agreed deed, such as might have caused the statute to run from the time of the demand, and the suit was filed a year after the death of the decedent.

4. Under the above rulings, the court erred in directing the verdict for the plaintiff administrator.

No. 14097. SEPTEMBER 18, 1942.
On November 2, 1938, H. C. Brogdon, as administrator of the estate of F. M. Hogan, filed an action in ejectment against Fred H. Hogan, nephew of the decedent, and Mrs. Maude Hogan, the nephew's wife, to recover a farm which it was alleged belonged to the decedent under a deed made to him in 1930 and remained in his possession until his death in March, 1937, but which the defendants *Page 475 have thereafter held in their possession under some claim against the deceased. The defendants set up, in their answer in the nature of a cross-petition, an oral contract between themselves and the deceased uncle to devise or convey the land to them in consideration of certain personal services which were to be performed by them for the decedent and his brother, W. J. Hogan, father of the defendant, Fred H. Hogan, and which they alleged they had fully performed; and the defendants prayed for a specific performance of this alleged contract.

The case has been twice before this court before the present writ of error. After a verdict for the defendants on their cross-action and the refusal of a new trial, this court reversed the judgment on exceptions to the overruling of a general demurrer to the cross-action, and held that it was fatally defective in failing to set forth essential averments with respect to the contract which formed the basis of the cross-action. Brogdon v. Hogan, 189 Ga. 244 (5 S.E.2d 657).

Before any dismissal of the cross-action in the court below, the defendants amended and afterwards made other amendments thereto. The court then overruled demurrers to the cross-action as amended. A verdict was again rendered for the defendants, and a new trial was refused. A majority of this court then held that the petition as amended stated a cause of action, and that demurrers to the amended pleading were properly overruled; but held, upon a consideration of all the evidence, that the contract as pleaded by the cross-action had not been proved, and again reversed the judgment. It was, however, held that under the ruling as then made it was unnecessary to determine whether or not "the defendants have discharged the obligations resting upon them under the alleged agreement." Brogdon v. Hogan,191 Ga. 647, 657, 658 (13 S.E.2d 666).

On the third trial, after evidence on both sides was concluded, the court sustained the plaintiff's motion for a directed verdict against the cross-action, on the grounds: (1) that the evidence was insufficient to support any verdict for the defendants; and (2) that, "under the contract alleged in the petition, the evidence clearly shows, as to supporting and caring for W. J. Hogan [brother of decedent], the defendants in this case have failed to carry out their contract." The defendants now except to the refusal of a new *Page 476 trial, on the ground that there were issues of fact under the pleadings and the evidence, which the jury should have passed upon, as to: (a) whether or not the defendants failed to carry out their part of the contract as to "supporting and caring for W. J. Hogan," the decedent's brother; and (b) whether or not the plaintiff administrator himself first breached and renounced the alleged contract, by filing an application to the ordinary in January, 1938, over the protest of the defendants, to sell the land involved, and thereby excused or relieved the defendants from further performance thereafter.

The particular alleged failure of the defendants with respect to the brother, W. J. Hogan, is, that the defendant, Fred H. Hogan, as guardian of W. J. Hogan, four months after the administrator filed his application to sell the land, filed a petition to the ordinary for leave to encroach on the corpus of the ward's estate, in order to pay for special nursing and treatment; that by the alleged contract between the defendants and their deceased uncle the defendants had undertaken to support W. J. Hogan, the brother, not only during the life of the uncle, but thereafter during the brother's lifetime; and that, having failed to perform the obligation as to the brother, they were not entitled to specific performance.

As finally amended — summarizing the substance of the cross-petition as stated in the last decision (191 Ga. 647) — the defendants alleged that in December, 1930, they contracted orally with their uncle that if they would move from where they were living to the described farm in question, cultivate, drain, improve, and build up the property, and maintain it as a home for the decedent uncle and his crippled brother, defendants' father, during the old age of the uncle and his brother, the uncle would purchase the property for the defendants (plaintiffs in the cross-action); and that legal title would be vested in them at his death "by deed or will." They alleged their full performance of the contract, and a failure by the decedent to vest legal title in them by either a deed or a will.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.E.2d 54, 194 Ga. 474, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-brogdon-ga-1942.