Livingston v. Taylor

63 S.E. 694, 132 Ga. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 694 (Livingston v. Taylor) 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
Livingston v. Taylor, 63 S.E. 694, 132 Ga. 1 (Ga. 1909).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. One ground of the motion for a new trial complains that the court in his charge to the jury failed to state the contentions of the plaintiffs in vital particulars. The instructions of the court in this regard were substantially that the plaintiffs contended that Alfred Mullis died seized and possessed of a certain lot of land; that Lovett Brown as his executor, under an order from the court of ordinary, sold the land in controversy, and at the sale the executor, through an intermediary, purchased the land; that such sale was voidable as to the legatees, if they saw fit, within the time prescribed by law, to attack such conveyance; and that they further contended that this proceeding was brought within that time. Pie further charged, in that connection, that the specific allegations upon which the plaintiffs relied for a recovery were set forth in the petition, which the jury would take out with them, and which it would be their duty to read carefully in order That they might intelligently pass upon the case under the issues made by the law and the evidence. The plaintiffs in error insist that in their petition they attacked the executor’s sale as illegal on three grounds: (1) that the [4]*4executor purchased thereat through an intermediary; (2) that the executor suppressed bidding upon the land at the sale by representing to prospective purchasers that it was uncertain whether he would sell the land on the day advertised, and if he did sell, it-would be only for the purpose.of perfecting the title of the legatees under the will; and (3) that he dissuaded an owner of adjacent land from buying the property, by agreeing that if he would not bid on the land he would convey him, without other consideration, twenty acres of the land which adjoined the land of this prospective purchaser. The plaintiffs further insist that they offered evidence tending to establish all three of their assaults, upon the legality of the executor’s sale, and that the court’s formulation of their contentions limited their attack upon the sale to the allegation that the deed to the executor was voidable because he was a purchaser at his own sale. The court charged in the abstract the law as to constructive and actual fraud; and also to the effect that if the purchaser at the sale did not act in behalf of the executor in the purchase, but bought the land in his own. right in good faith, and afterwards sold it to the executor, the executor would have acquired a good title, “provided that he was. guilty of no fraudulent conduct which would affect the bona fideson the part of . . [the executor] in suppressing competition or otherwise as charged in the plaintiffs’ bill.” When the trial court undertakes to summarize the contentions of the parties as expressed in their formal pleadings, he should not omit from the-summary any substantial issue. It is bad practice to refer to the jury the duty of wading through pleadings for the purpose of supplementing the statement of the contentions as made by the court. Jurors are generally untrained in the use of technical legal nomenclature and oftentimes might misconstrue or.fail to understand the full purport and meaning of a properly pleaded issue. But as the-purpose of such a recapitulation of the issues by the court in his charge is to present their substance in concise form, a new trial will not be granted in every case because the jury are instructed that the court does not undertake in his summary to be exhaustive in his statement of the issues, and they are specifically informed that the contentions not referred to in his summary will be found in the pleadings, which they are directed to carefully peruse. A reviewing court will look to the nature of the case, and. [5]*5the charge as a whole, to ascertain whether the jury has been misled, or whether it is likely that the contentions of the parties have been misunderstood or lost sight of. Applying the rule stated in the first headnote, we do not think the court’s presentation of the plaintiffs’ case would alone require a new trial, in the absence of other errors.

2. Another ground of the motion complains of the following: “The law the court can deal with, and you receive the law from the court; and when you receive the law from the court, then you are the judges of both the law and the evidence, and this should lead you to the real facts, the truth of the case.” The error alleged is that this charge left the jury to decide both the law and the facts of the case, whereas they should have been instructed that they were bound absolutely by the law applicable to the case as given in the charge of the court. It is true that in all cases the jury must take the law as expounded by the court without any concern on their part for the correctness or incorrectness of his exposition. Necessarily, in the application of the law as expounded by the court, the jury must exercise some degree of judgment. But in civil eases it is erroneous to charge the jury that they are the judges of the law and the facts of the case; though the error in this regard may not of itself require a new trial. Higginbotham v. Campbell, 85 Ga. 638 (11 S. E. 1027); Atlantic etc. R. Co. v. Bowen, 125 Ga. 460 (54 S. E. 105).

3. The court charged that the petition of the plaintiffs and the answer of the defendants “do not in this ease have any probative value; that is, they are not evidence.” It is complained that this charge is so Morded as to be understood to mean that the answer could not be used for probative purposes as admissions to the extent of the admissions therein contained. The form of expression, as well as the context in which it appears, shows that this charge was a mere cautionary instruction on the part of the judge that the jury should not confound the pleadings with the proof. The case as made by the petition was that the executor’s sale was fraudulent, and the various defendants who aftefwards acquired title from the executor had knowledge of the fraud at the time of their purchase. The defendants by their answer vigorously denied all the allegations of fraud, and in this charge the court was merely warning the jury that they should be controlled [6]*6in their verdict by the evidence and not by the pleadings. It is true that the answer admitted that Mullís died in possession of the land in controversy, leaving a will which was duly probated by Brown as his executor, and that the land was afterwards sold under an order from the court of ordinary and purchased by Sapp, who afterwards conveyed it to Brown, under whom the other defendants claim title. The scope of the evidence shows that the case was tried in view of those admissions; and we do not think the court could have been understood by the jury as requiring proof of those facts, the truth of which was assumed in the whole conduct of the case.

4. It is complained that the court erred in admitting in evidence the following deeds: (1) from'Lovett Brown to Mrs. P. T. C. Boutwell, dated January 9, 1880, consideration $50, conveying 50 acres in the eastern corner of the lot in controversy; (2) from Mrs. P. T. C. Boutwell to Lovett Brown, dated January 19, 1880, conveying the lot in controversy, except 50 acres in the eastern corner of the lot; (3) from Mrs. P. T! C. Boutwell to Asa Harrell, dated January 18, 1881, conveying 40 acres of the eastern corner of the lot in controversy; (4) from Hiram Sapp, administrator of Asa Harrell, to Lovett Brown, of 40 acres in the eastern corner of 'the lot in controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 694, 132 Ga. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-taylor-ga-1909.