McDay v. Long

11 S.E.2d 395, 63 Ga. App. 421, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 28, 1940
Docket28356.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 S.E.2d 395 (McDay v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDay v. Long, 11 S.E.2d 395, 63 Ga. App. 421, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 114 (Ga. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

On October 9, 1939, Jessie Mae Long brought a bail-trover proceeding against Ada McDay for a described Oldsmobile sedan. The defendant gave bond and retained possession of the property. On November 3, 1939, the defendant filed an answer denying the allegations of the petition, and setting up that she did not claim title to the automobile but claimed the right to possession through her mother, Mary Calhoun, who had made a loan to Geraldine Pierce, alleged rightful owner of the automobile, Mary Calhoun holding the automobile under a bill of sale given by Geraldine Pierce to secure a loan. On the same day Mary Calhoun and Geraldine Pierce filed an intervention setting up that Geraldine Pierce owned the automobile by virtue of a bill of sale executed and delivered by J. B. Long, husband of the plaintiff in the bail-trover proceeding, in consideration of services which she had rendered to him, and that Mary Calhoun was holding the automobile as security for a loan which she had made to Geraldine Pierce; On November 24, 1939, Jessie Mae Long filed an answer to the intervention, denying the substantial allegations, and setting up that the act of the interveners was a mere fraudulent scheme to secure possession and ownership of the property, and that none of the instruments under which either claimed was bona fide and genuine, but merely a scheme and device which originated in the mind of the defendant in the bail-trover proceeding.

By agreement of the parties the main trover action and the intervention were tried together before a judge of the civil court of Fulton County, without the aid of a jury, the evidence being substantially as follows: It was stipulated between the parties that the legal title to the automobile was vested in J. B. Long at the time of his death, unless he had transferred it to Geraldine *422 Pierce, and that it was among other things set apart as a year’s support for his wife, the plaintiff in the bail-trover action, although the defendant in that action and the intervenors denied the legality of the setting apart of the automobile in the year’s-support proceeding, contending that Long transferred ownership to Geraldine Pierce on July 29, 1939, before his death in August, 1939. Demand was made before the bail-trover proceeding was brought. Clarence Bell testified for the plaintiff, without objection, that in his opinion the automobile in question was worth not less than $400.

Geraldine Pierce testified for the defendant and the intervenors, that she was a practical nurse and was employed by J. B. Long as his secretary before he was taken to his bed with tuberculosis and was unable to work; that she nursed him through a long illness between the spring of 1938 and his death in August, 1939; that he was a bed patient, requiring constant care and being very ill; that she did all the work necessary to wait on and care for him; that he did not have the money to pay her for many months in the end, and made a will bequeathing to her his automobile and other things; that about a week before his death he said he wanted to pay her for her services and wanted to make sure that she got the automobile; that he had a bill of sale prepared and signed it in the presence of two witnesses and turned it over to her on July 29, 1939, a few days before his death; that Betty Lane and Sarah 'WTiite were witnesses to the bill of sale; that Long’s wife did nothing for him during his last illness, and visited him only once for a few minutes just a few days before his death; and that the witness performed services for him, and did not receive payment because Long did not have the money with which to pay her, and he paid her by transferring the automobile to her.

Maty Calhoun testified for the defendant and the intervenors, that she was the mother of Ada McDay and was sixty-six years of age; that she lent $125 to Geraldine Pierce, and took a bill of sale on her automobile, an Oldsmobile sedan, to secure the loan, and turned the money over to her through the witness’s daughter, Ada McDay, a few weeks before J. B. Long died; that she could not drive an automobile, and her daughter, Ada McDay, was keeping it for her until she could get her money back; that she owned three houses, and one of them was clear; that she had saved some money which she got from the death of her two boys ten or twelve years *423 ago; and that when she got her money back she would give Geraldine Pierce the car. On cross-examination she testified that after the death of J. B. Long she turned over $125 to a man at the court-house and got the security which was given by Geraldine Pierce; that she did not lend the money but once, and that was after Long’s death and burial; that she did not know the man to whom she delivered the money at the court-house, and did not know whether or not Geraldine Pierce got the money.

Ada B. MeDay testified for the defendant and intervenors, that she was the daughter of Mary Calhoun; that her mother was old and sick and her memory very poor; that the money her mother testified about, as having been given to a man at the court-house, was not the loan on the automobile, but was a small fee which she paid to the bondsmen who signed the trover bond on the automobile ; that the witness did not claim to own the automobile, but has been keeping it for her mother and driving it because her mother is not able to drive an automobile; that the witness has been convicted of lottery; that all of the witnesses on the agreement and will of J. B. Long signed in the presence of each other and in the presence of J. B. Long; that he signed in the presence of the witnesses; and that in her opinion the automobile in question is not worth more than $250.

Sarah White testified for the defendant and intervenors, that she was called to the bedside of J. B. Long on July 29, 1939; that Bosa Belle Jackson was with her; that J. B. Long asked them to be witnesses to a bill of sale, submitted to her on the stand; that she signed the same as a witness after J. B. Long signed it; that he read it and said that he was paying Geraldine Pierce for nursing him, by transferring his automobile to her by the bill of sale; that Geraldine Pierce paid one dollar to Long; that she also signed the paper entitled “Agreement and Will;” that Long read and signed the paper in her presence and in the presence of all of the others whose names appear thereon; that they were all together, and all whose names appear signed the instrument at the same time; that J. B. Long signed first; that he read the paper to them before he signed it, and asked them to be witnesses to it; and that the witness is a neighbor and friend of Geraldine Pierce.

H. E. Nash testified for the defendant and’ intervenors, that he was a practicing physician, had special training in the treatment *424 of tuberculosis, and had done general practice; that he treated J. B. Long for tuberculosis during his last illness; that Geraldine Pierce was his nurse and did an excellent job, and, in the opinion of the witness, prolonged his life six or eight months by her good work, but the case was hopeless, and the patient died in August, 1939; that the witness visited him on July 29, 1939, and was sure of the date; and that Long was then very ill, but perfectly clear mentally.

Bosa Belle Jackson testified for the defendant and intervenors, that she signed as a witness on the bill of sale from J. B.

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Related

Hinchcliffe v. Pinson
74 S.E.2d 497 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1953)
McDay v. Long
19 S.E.2d 436 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E.2d 395, 63 Ga. App. 421, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcday-v-long-gactapp-1940.