Kieth v. Catchings

64 Ga. 773
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 Ga. 773 (Kieth v. Catchings) 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
Kieth v. Catchings, 64 Ga. 773 (Ga. 1880).

Opinion

Crawford, Justice.

The plaintiff seeks to recover a-lot of land in the city of Atlanta under the statutory form provided for such cases, and in support of his suit he submits in evidence to the jury deeds from James Atkins to R. S. Eggleston, dated December 9th, 1870, from Perkerson, the sheriff of Fulton county, to J. R. Wallace, dated March 4th, 1874, reciting that the land was sold under a fi. fa. in favor of J. R-Wallace, as the property of Eggleston, and then a deed from Wallace to himself. By Chamberlin, a witness, he showed that Catchings, the defendant, held under and through Eggleston, and was in possession when suit began. By Fowler and Bass, that when Wallace’s judgment was obtained Fowler had authority from Eggleston to sell the lot, and there rested his cause.

The defendant supported his title by deed from Eggleston to the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, dated January 27th, 1873, a bond being given to reconvey to Eggleston upon the payment of the sum of $500.00 and interest, also a deed from three commissioners of the Freed[775]*775man’s Savings and Trust Company to Chamberlin, Boynton & Co., dated April 21th, 1877, accompanied by certified transcripts from the treasury department of the United States showing title vested in them, and a deed from H. S. Johnson, a partner of the house of Chamberlin, Boynton & Co., to his partners as individuals, dated May 5th, 1877, and then a deed from the said Chamberlin and Boynton to Catchings, the defendant.

Upon the testimony and the law as given in charge, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff moved a new trial for errors which he claimed to have been committed.

1. The first assignment of error is that the court should have ruled out the deed from Eggleston to the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company; their bond to reconvey title to Eggleston upon the payment of the $500.00 ; the deed to Chamberlin, Boynton & Co.; also the certified copy of the manuscripts showing the authority of the commissioners to make the deed and transfer the note of Eggleston.

The objection to this testimony nowhere appears to have been stated to the court below at the time when it was offered, nor in the motion for a new trial, but upon the argument before us it is insisted that it was illegal because the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company had no power under their charter to hold real estate, or accept it as security for loans, and therefore that the deed executed by Eggleston to the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company was void.

This company was chartered in 1865 with power “ to receive on deposit such sums of money as may be from time to time offered therefor by, or on behalf of, persons heretofore held in slavery, or their descendants, investing the same in stocks, bonds, treasury notes, or other securities of the United States.”

In the year 1870 their charter was amended “by adding thereto at the end thereof the following words“ And to the extent of one-lialf in bonds or notes secured by mortgage on real estate in double the value of the loan.”

[776]*776This loan of $500.00 was made to Eggleston, and as a security for its payment the deed was executed and a bond given to reconvey upon the payment of the debt, the contract having been made and the deed executed in 1873, nearly three years after the amendment of their charter. If just such a contract had been made between two of the citizens of this state, we apprehend that there would be no division of opinion as to the exact legal rights of the parties.

Corporations created by other states, and even by foreign nations, are recognized both by our laws and our courts, and no reason occurs to us why the same rights do not attach to this that would to any other.

Since 1871 certainly, and perhaps before, whenever -any person conveyed real estate by deed, to secure the payment of a debt, and received a bond for titles back, conditioned that upon .the payment of the debt the land should be re-conveyed, such conveyance passed the title of such property for that purpose to the grantee, the estate remaining in the grantor being purely equitable, and consisting of his right to redeem the legal title on the payment of the money. It is an equitable mortgage in fact and effect, and until the grantor puts himself in position to claim the benefit of his equity of redemption, he cannot defeat .the rights arising to others under his contract.

A purchaser of his interest at sheriff’s sale stands in no better relation to it than he did; he too must pay the money before he can claim the land. This has been ruled in the 54 Ga., 45; 55 Ib., 650, 412, 691; 57 Ib., 601. And in the 59 Ga., 507, it was held, Justice Bleckley pronouncing the opinion, that this was the law prior to the act of 1871. It would seem, therefore, that no question could be better settled.

2. That the court erred in not allowing the introduction of evidence going to show fraud in the procurement and making of th,e deeds by the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, or their agents or attorneys, or any one holding Under them, without first bringing it home to defendant, [777]*777especially when the plaintiff held under a sheriff’s deed, and the judgment was upon a debt existing before the sale of the land to the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company by Eggleston.

The record shows that no evidence was offered to show fraud in the procurement or making of the deed, and that the opportunity to establish fraud in the defendant, or those under whom she claimed, if notice thereof were brought home to her knowledge, was extended to the plaintiff. This being the fact, we think that the second ground was properly overruled.

3. Because the court ruled out a quit claim deed from Eggleston to Chamberlin, Boynton & Co., and an obligation back to Eggleston, going to show that he had an interest in the land, there being a consideration expressed, and an agreement with Eggleston touching the same.

The testimony shows that this deed was made long after Eggleston had parted with his title; that there was no consideration paid for it, whilst the obligation was nothing but an agreement to look to the land alone for the payment of the debt.

Under the view which we have taken of the original transaction, and the relative rights of the parties, the introduction of this deed could not have changed in any degree the effect thereof, and it was properly excluded.

4. Because the court would not permit the plaintiff to show by parol evidence that Eggleston was the actual owner of the land at the time that the judgment was obtained and the sale made.

A legal title and ownership to land cannot be shown in that way.

5. Because the court refused to allow testimony to show that the bond for titles to Eggleston was fraudulently transferred to Allen, to defeat the judgment under which the land was sold.

The transfer of this bond to Allen or any one else, could not affect the title of the party holding the deed, until the [778]*778terms of the bond were complied with, and the rights of the owners of the land secured, hence there was no error in this ruling of the court.

6.

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Related

Tuggle v. Estate of Robinson
247 S.E.2d 573 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1978)
Kelley v. Black
47 S.E.2d 802 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ga. 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kieth-v-catchings-ga-1880.