Myers v. Adcock

31 S.E.2d 160, 198 Ga. 180, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 7, 1944
Docket14867.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 S.E.2d 160 (Myers v. Adcock) 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
Myers v. Adcock, 31 S.E.2d 160, 198 Ga. 180, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 369 (Ga. 1944).

Opinion

*184 Atkinson, Justice.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) Counsel for the defendant in error filed a motion to dismiss the writ of error on the ground that there is no exception to a final judgment, the motion being based 'on the authority contained in Lingo v. Rich, 169 Ga. 628 (151 S. E. 387); Griffin v. Smith, 197 Ga. 123 (28 S. E. 2d, 261), and Williams v. Cross, 197 Ga. 295 (28 S. E. 2d, 924). This court, at the present term, after notice to the attorneys of record in the instant case, has, in Albany Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Henderson, 198 Ga. 116 (31 S. E. 2d, 20), overruled such portions of the foregoing decisions' as would authorize the dismissal of the instant writ of error. Accordingly,, the motion to dismiss is denied.

The trial covered two cases, which, to a large extent, involved the same issues.

In the equity case, wherein Myers sought to cancel the fi. fa. of the State Bank of Waycross containing a transfer to Long, and to cancel the sheriff’s deed to Long predicated upon a sale under this fi. fa., the principal issue was the validity of the transfer endorsed on the fi. fa. While the transfer of the fi. fa. was dated April 15,, 1921, Myers claimed that this fi. fa. had been paid in full in 1923 under a contract in which notes and a security deed had been given, and subsequently paid, to the State Bank of Waycross; and that the transfer to Long on the fi. fa. was not made until 1925 — -that it was entered on the fi. fa. in 1925 and dated back to 1921.

In the ejectment suit by Adcock, who had purchased the land from the heirs at law of Long, the sheriff’s deed to Long, which was a link in his chain of title, was attacked on the ground set forth in the preceding paragraph. In the answer to this ejectment suit, W. T. Peters Jr. and H. Lee Peters, who were in possession of the land either as bona fide claimants, or as tenants of the receiver appointed by the court, claimed that they had contracted for the purchase of the land with both Myers and Long, and had performed their part of the contract, but that, by reason of the conduct and death of parties and attorneys, no deed had ever been executed and delivered to them.

The evidence pertaining to the above issues is voluminous and complicated.

In the equity suit to cancel the fi. fa. and sheriff’s deed, wherein the validity of the transfer of the fi. fa. was involved, there was *185 positive evidence that the transfer thereon was entered on the date shown, to wit, on April 15, 1921. Both F. Y. Paradise, the attorney acting for Long, and L. J. Cooper, the president of the State Bank of Wayeross, who signed the transfer, so testified. While there was both direct and circumstantial evidence to the ■contrary, still this was a question of fact for the jury to determine. So also ivas it a question of fact whether Long, as transferee of the fi. fa., or any one authorized to act for him, consented to the settlement agreement, or received any funds in payment of the notes executed by Myers in extinguishment of the debt thereby created. These were questions for the jury, and on this issue there is evidence to sustain their verdict.

As to the issues involved in the ejectment suit of Adcock v. Peters, Adcock made out a prima facie case by introducing the deeds in his chain of title. The deed from the sheriff to Long, Avhich formed a link in that chain, was attacked on the grounds above stated; but, as already indicated, it was a jury question, and eA’idence Avas introduced to sustain its validity. As a further defense to the ejectment-suit portion of the case, Peters sought to ■establish an equitable title to the land, based upon a parol contract for the sale of the land between W. T. Peters Jr. and the two interested parties, Myers and Long. Whether the alleged parol contract was sufficiently established to take the case out of the statute of frauds (Code, §§ 20-401 (4), 20-402), or whether Peters produced proof that both Long and Myers consented to the terms of the sale, need not here be determined, since the evidence of Mrs. M. A. Long and HoAvard Farmer made an issue of fact as to the existence of the alleged contract, and from this eAddence the jury were fully authorized to determine this issue against the plaintiffs in error.

The trial judge did not err in denying the motion for new trial on the general’ grounds.

It is contended in the 4th ground of the motion that the court erred in permitting Adcock, the plaintiff in the ejectment suit, to assume the burden of proof. Before the introduction of any evidence, the attorney for Myers, plaintiff in the equity suit, invoked a ruling on this question, and insisted that Myers should haA'e the opening and conclusion. The following order consolidating the suits had preAdously been granted:

*186 “John Doe ex dem. H. Levy Adcock vs. Richard Roe, casual ejector, and W. T. Peters Jr. and H. Lee Peters, tenants in possession No. 2934 Ejectment Walton Superior Court May Term, 1941.
\ No. 1387 (Walton Superior Court ( Equitable Petition / February term, 1927. “J. T. Myers vs. T. L. Long, E. S. Gordon, and Claude Maleom
“The above entitled causes involving title to the same tract of land, and the questions of law and facts in the above last-named cause being covered and involved in said first-named cause, by agreement of counsel, it is ordered that said cases and the issues therein be, and the same are hereby consolidated, . . and the same continue as one case under the name and style of the first-named case. That J. M. Roberts, receiver in last-named cause, be and he is hereby made a party defendant in said consolidated cause.”

The plaintiff in the equity suit originally had the burden of establishing the invalidity of the deed from the sheriff to Long, and this was a vital and controlling issue in that case. However, when Adcock filed his ejectment suit the burden was on him to prove his title. He not only had the burden of proving the title from the sheriff to Long, but of establishing other deeds in his chain of title, and of further establishing proof as to mesne profits. While the facts constituting the execution of ,the deed from the sheriff to Long raised a vital question, yet it was not necessarily the sole and controlling issue in the ejectment suit. The order recites that the issues “in the [equity suit] being covered and invdlved in [the ejectment suit], by agreement of counsel, . . the same continue as one case under the name and style of [the ejectment suit].” From the construction and phraseology of this order, which was signed by the predecessor of the trial judge, we hold that the trial judge did not err in construing it to mean that the plaintiff in the ejectment suit would have the burden of proof.

The 5th ground alleges error in the exclusion from evidence *187 •of a carbon copy of a letter from John W. Bennett to F. Y. Paradise dated November 15, 1924.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.E.2d 160, 198 Ga. 180, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-adcock-ga-1944.