Oatis v. Brown

59 Ga. 711
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 59 Ga. 711 (Oatis v. Brown) 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
Oatis v. Brown, 59 Ga. 711 (Ga. 1877).

Opinion

Bleokxey, Judge.

The claimant is the mother of the defendant inji. fa. Pier title originated thus: The son purchased the premises in I860, built a house and went into possession, his father and mother with him, he being a single man, and his object being to provide a home for his parents. Title was conveyed to him in 1863, in pursuance of his purchase. On the 10th of December, 1867, he executed a mortgage upon the property to one Lawson, to secure a note for over two thousand dollars, on which one thousand dollars had been paid. In this note he was principal, and there were two securities. The payee was one Pinkston, and Lawson held by transfer. The note was given for borrowed money.

On the second of March, 1869, the premises were sold by the United States marshal, on a general judgment from the circuit court (the date of which does not appear) in favor of a third person against the mortgagor, and was purchased by the mortgagee, Lawson, at the price of forty-five dollars. The marshal made a deed accordingly. Before this sale took place, Oatis and Lawson (mortgagor and moi’tgagee) had a conference, in which it seexxxs to have been understood that Lawsoxi was to xnake the purchase, and that any of the Oatis family wex’e to be allowed to redeem on refunding the purchase xnoney, with certain expenses, and paying off the mortgage. Shortly after the sale, Lawson visited the px-emises, and arranged with the father or mother of Oatis to remain in possession as his tenant. There was no agreement for rent, and no x-ent was ever paid. The father died in 1871, and the xuother continued to reside on the place. On the 18th of Decembex-, 1872, Lawsoxi conveyed the premises to her by deed, the eonsideratioxx expressed being $1,618.00. This was done at the instance of a brother of Oatis, and the brother, according to his own evidence and that of Oatis ; paid to Lawson all of the money, except about twenty dollars, which latter [713]*713sum another person advanced, at the request of Oatis, and it was subsequently refunded out of rents which accrued from the property in 1873, while Oatis was renting it out professedly as agent for his mother. According to the evidence of Lawson, the greater part of the money was paid by the brother, some by another brother, and a small balance by this third person, at the request of Oatis. The note and mortgage were surrendered, and by some means came into the hands of Oatis, who seems to have lost or destroyed them. The claimant removed from the premises to Alabama, in 1873, after which event, Oatis rented out the property for her benefit. Until about the time she removed, he appears to have resided on the property and in the family, except that at intervals he was absent engaged in teaching school, a part of the time in Alabama and a part of the time in Stewart county. He still called the place home, and was there frequently, though as he testified, he never considered himself in possession after the purchase by Lawson at marshal’s sale. Much of the evidence tends to show that there was no substantial change in the possession from the time the house was built until 1873, except in so far as a change may have resulted from the verbal recognition, by one or both of the parents of Oatis, of Lawson as landlord. The final removal of Oatis to-Alabama was in 1873, the same year in which his mother removed. His father and mother were without means of their own, and in 1869 Oatis was forced into involuntary bankruptcy. The theory of the plaintiff in fi.fa. is, that the money borrowed of Pinkston, for which the note secured by the mortgage to Lawson was given, was borrowed by Oatis for the benefit of his brother, and was so used; that thus the mortgage debt was really the brother’s debt; and that, hence, when the land was redeemed by the brother, even if the money used belonged to him, it was but the discharge of his own debt, and the land again became the property of Oatis, the deed being taken to the mother as a fraudulent cover to hide and [714]*714protect the property from his creditors. Fraud or no fraud was thus the main issue.

The plaintiff’s fl. fa. originated thus: On the 29 th of May, 1867, a partnership, composed of three members (one of whom was the defendant, Oatis,) and a fourth person, made a promissory note for $3,060.00, due one month after date, payable to the plaintiff. Upon this note suit was commenced in April, 1869, returnable to the next May term of the superior court. The sheriff made a return of service upon one of the partners and upon the fourth person, and a return of non est inventus as to another of the partners. As to the defendant, Oatis, he made no return whatever. On the 6th of December, 1869, Oatis signed an acknowledgment on the declaration in these terms: “I hereby acknowledge myself to have been duly and legally served with the within process, and waive all copies and previous entry of service, consenting that this case stand for trial att his, November adjourned term, 1869.” Judgment was rendered at May term, 1872, against the partner served, and the defendant, Oatis, as principals, and against the executors of the fourth person (he having died), as security, for $2,598.50 principal debt, $798.29 for interest, with cost of suit. On this judgment, they?, fa. issued against all the defendants named therein. In 1873, the levy-now in question was made. The property is described in the levy as “one house and lot in the town of Georgetown, known as the Oatis place,” with no specification of the number of acres, the metes and bounds of the lot, or the street upon which it is situated.

1. A.t the trial of the claim, the claimant moved to dismiss the levy “ because it did not sufficiently describe the property, in this: that it simply described the property as one house and lot in Georgetown, known as the Oatis place, without specifying the number of acres levied on, the metes and bounds of said lot, and upon what street it was situated.”

The court overruled the motion. Whether the levy may not be defective in other respects, we need not decide. The [715]*715objection made to it was .specific and particular. With that only did the court below deal, and with that only do we deal. The law prescribes no special terms to be employed in description. The property is to be “ plainly described.” Code, §3640. "We do not think a court can hold, as matter of law, that “ one house and lot in Georgetown, known as the Oatis place,” is not a plain description. The premises might be so well known in the neighborhood as the “Oatis place,” as to need no further designation. Such a question. is for the jury, as was ruled in 12 Ga., 441, where the point, it is true, was not upon the levy but upon the sheriff’s ad- . vertisement. The principle, however, is the same. Code, §3647. Besides, the claimant was too late with such an objection to be heard with favor, even if she could have been heard at all. Not only had she claimed in resistance to this levy, as a levy, but there had been a previous trial and verdict on the issue joined. There was a second trial upon the same issue, a new trial having been granted.

2. A question arose as to whether the acknowledgment of service made by Oatis came too late. That acknowledg-. ment had been upon the declaration or process more than two years before any judgment was rendered in the case. Ordinarily, a case is, or may be, carried to judgment at the second term of the court after service — that is, in about six months and fifteen days. The court could have ordered service upon Oatis if, pending the action, he could be found within the jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Ga. 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oatis-v-brown-ga-1877.