O'Connor v. Deloach

16 S.E.2d 279, 65 Ga. App. 443, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 335
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 5, 1941
Docket28846.
StatusPublished

This text of 16 S.E.2d 279 (O'Connor v. Deloach) 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
O'Connor v. Deloach, 16 S.E.2d 279, 65 Ga. App. 443, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 335 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

*444 Stephens, P. J.

Mrs. L. E. DeLoach brought suit against J. A. Thigpen and J. B. O’Connor,.doing business as O’Connor Motor Company, and against them individually, to recover $851 and interest from April 4, 1939, at 7 per cent, per annum, the petition alleging that the amount of $851 was received by the defendants-from her separate estate in payment of the debts of her husband,. L. E. DeLoach; that on January 13, 1930, she acquired by purchase from her husband a certain described tract of land, since which date she has occupied the same as her home, known to the-defendants, and that for a number of years before 1938 her husband did considerable business with the defendants and became indebted to them in an amount unknown to the plaintiff; that during the year 1936 or 1937 defendants or one of them indorsed a note for her husband, which plaintiff understands was in the' amount of $300, payable to the Claxton National Bank or the Claxton State Bank, which it is the understanding of the plaintiff the bank required the indorser to pay, her husband thereby becoming indebted to said indorser in the amount paid; that no part of the account with O’Connor Motor Company contracted by her husband and no part of the debt represented by the note of $300 which was paid by O’Connor Motor Company or J. A. Thigpen for her husband was the debt or obligation of the plaintiff but was that of her husband; that her husband became insolvent in 1936 or 1937, and after said note was paid the defendants learned that he had no property with which to secure the payment of said note and his-account, and J. A. Thigpen, representing the O’Connor Motor-Company, proposed that the plaintiff secure the payment of the-amount paid on said note of $300 by pledging her separate property hereinbefore mentioned with O’Connor Motor Company as security until her husband could himself pay said amount; that she relied on the promises made to her and the assurance that she-would have no part of the amount to pay and that her property would not be subjected to the payment of said amount for which she pledged her property as security for the debt of her husband;, that on or about September 7, 1937, an employee of O’Connor Motor Company came to her home with a note and deed to secure debt already prepared, and presented the same to her to be signed;, that she signed the note and deed covering her property hereinbefore mentioned, believing that she was giving security for the debt *445 of her husband as represented by the $300 note paid by the defendants; that in August, 1938, just before her note was due, she learned that she had given a note for the principal sum of $726.64, payable to O’Connor Motor Company, due September 1, 1938, and a deed, covering her home, to secure the payment thereof; that O’Connor Motor Company was at that time a creditor of her husband and that the plaintiff received no consideratoin for signing said note or deed, both of which represented debts that her husband owed before the note and deed were given; that at the time she signed the note and deed the defendants knew they were given as security for the debts of her husband, and that the property pledged was plaintiff’s in her own right and was not subject to the payment of the debts attempted to be secured and from which she had received no consideration; that immediately after she gave said note and deed the defendants tried to sell the same to the Glenville Bank, and, when they failed to do so, obtained a loan from the bank and pledged said note and deed as collateral security for their note then given to the bank; that the procuring of said note and deed from the plaintiff was a scheme of the defendants to subject her separate estate to the payment of her husband’s debts to them, and the loan obtained from the bank was a further scheme by the defendants to get plaintiff’s note and deed into the hands of an innocent party before maturity and to thereby place themselves in a position to satisfy, out of the property of the plaintiff, the debts due them by her husband; that the property of plaintiff secured by the deed was sold by forced sale on April 4, 1939, by the Glenville Bank under the power given therein, and that the plaintiff bid in said property for the sum of $851, in an effort to save her home, and obtained a loan on said property and paid the amount of her bid; that the Glenville Bank never purchased said note and deed of the plaintiff and never had anything invested therein, and the defendants received the amount of her bid, $851, out of her separate estate, which was paid on the debts of her husband, and said payment was made by her against her wishes and her will and by the forced sale of her home with the full knowledge of the defendants, and the funds received by them were assets of her separate estate and were applied on her husband’s debts which were due before the execution of the said note and deed by her to the defendants; that no part of said debts were plaintiff’s debts and she had *446 never assumed the payment of any part thereof, or agreed to pay any part thereof, and received no part of the consideration for the note and deed given the defendants; that the defendants had full knowledge that plaintiff was a married woman, that the debts due them were those of her husband, and that the security given them by her was her own separate estate and given without consideration as an accommodation surety, and the funds received by the defendants in payment of the debts of her husband were funds of the separate estate of the plaintiff; that the Glenville Bank, in the sale of her home, acted in accordance with the instructions and directions of the defendants and for the benefit of the defendants, and that the defendants received the amount, or the benefit of the amount, paid by her in the purchase of her home on April 4, 1939; that the defendants had full knowledge of the facts herein stated, and their acts were prompted for the sole purpose of collecting the debts of the plaintiff’s husband out of the assets of her separate estate.

The defendants filed an answer denying liability and alleging that they were not parties to any scheme to subject the property of the plaintiff to the payment of her husband’s debts; that the husband was indebted to O’Connor Motor Company and told them that he had no property with which to secure the indebtedness except his home the deed to which was in his wife’s name, but that he would see her and ascertain if she would sign a note and deed to secure the indebtedness; that shortly thereafter he reported to them that his wife had agreed to sign such papers, whereupon they had a note and deed prepared for her signature, which papers were taken to her by one of their employees for her signature, but that neither of the defendants at any time talked to her about signing the papers and no one by their authority spoke to her in reference thereto, and that the plaintiff at no time, before or since the said note fell due, said anything to any of the defendants in regard to said paper or denied to them her liability thereon; that neither of the defendants had knowledge that the property conveyed was the property of the plaintiff and that they inferred from what was stated to them by her husband that the title to the property was in the plaintiff’s name for the purpose of putting it beyond reach of her husband’s creditors; that they accepted the note and deed in good faith and in consideration thereof extended the time of *447

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jones v. Crawford
45 L.R.A. 105 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1899)
Detwiler v. Bainbridge Grocery Co.
47 S.E. 553 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.E.2d 279, 65 Ga. App. 443, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-deloach-gactapp-1941.