Peel v. Bryson

72 Ga. 331
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 25, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 72 Ga. 331 (Peel v. Bryson) 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
Peel v. Bryson, 72 Ga. 331 (Ga. 1884).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

By consent of counsel, this cause was heard and determined by the presiding judge, upon issues both of fact and law. The affidavit of illegality contains two grounds:

(1.) That defendant in execution did not owe the debt, and was never served with process in the original suit on which the judgment was rendered from which the execution issued, and had never waived such service.

(2.) That, after the j udgment was rendered, affiant was adjudged a bankrupt, and was thereafter discharged; that the judgment was a debt provable in bankruptcy, and was ex[333]*333tinguished by the discharge. The court, upon the facts in proof, sustained the last ground, which we shall first consider.

1. Whether the judgment in bankruptcy,' discharging the affiant from the payment of debts existing previously to his adjudication, includes the claim in question, depends upon its being within the class excepted from the operation of the discharge by the act of congress. Section 5117 of the Revised Statutes of the United States provides “ that no debt created by fraud,” among others named, “ shall be discharged in bankruptcy.” The Supreme Court of the United States, in Neal vs. Clarke, 95 U. S., 704, decided that “ fraud,” as used in this section of the bankrupt act, meant positive fraud, or fraud in fact, involving moral turpitude or intentional wrong, and not implied fraud or fraud in law, which may exist without the imputation of bad faith or immorality; and that, where a party paid an executor for a portion of the assets of an estate which he purchased at a discount, but without any actual fraud, and where he was, with the executor, who failed to account therefor, made liable for a devastavit, and was subsequently discharged in bankruptcy, such discharge was a complete defence to an action against him for the devastavit. The same court, 99 U. S., pp. 1, 7, commenting upon and quoting from this case says, “ with this definition we are content. It is founded both on reason and authority. Clearly, it- does not include such fraud as the law implies from the purchase of property from a debtor with intent thereby to hinder and delay his creditors in the collection of their debts. But if it did, such a purchase does not create a debt from the purchaser to the creditors. As between the debtor and the purchaser the sale is good, but as between a creditor and the purchaser it is void. The purchaser does not subject himself to a liability to pay the creditors the value of what- he buys; all the risk he runs is that the sale may be avoided and the property reclaimed for their benefit. To come within the exception of the bank[334]*334xupt act, the debt must be created by fraud.” We are, therefore, to determine whether the debt, for which the judgment was rendered in this case, was created by the actual fraud of the debtor, and originated in bad faith, such as involves “ moral turpitude and intentional wrong.” If such was its origin, the affiant is not protected by his discharge in bankruptcy, nor is its character in any manner affected or changed by the circumstance of its having been in judgment when the party was adjudged a bankrupt. McAfee vs. Covington, 71 Ga., 272. The only evidence on the trial bearing on this point was the declaration on which the plaintiff obtained the judgment, from which the execution now in controversy issued.

The declaration sets forth the fact that the plaintiff purchased from the defendant and his partner, one Jack, a certain lot in the city of Atlanta for a price therein named, and took from them a conveyance therefor in the usual form, and containing the usual warranty of title { and it then goes on to charge upon them deceitful and fraudulent representations in relation to certain incumbrances, claims and liens which they, knew to exist upon the land, and which they concealed from plaintiff, and, by means of this fraud and concealment, sold to the plaintiff the premises. 'It specified an outstanding claim on the land in favor of one Stone, which they never extinguished, and which Stone never authorized them to dispose of; and that,Dby reason of these fraudulent representations, plaintiff had lost great gains and profits, which he otherwise would have made and derived from his purchase, and in addition was-put to a charge and expense of $425.00 in relieving the premises from the lien, claim and incumbrance of the said Stone, and he asked that process might issue calling defendants into court to answer him in an action on the case for deceit.

Our learned brother of the superior court was of opinion that the debt sued for in this action did not originate in fraud, but thought this a suit for a breach of war- - [335]*335ranty contained in the deed, and the recovery must have been had upon that allegation in the declaration, because the charge of fraud contained therein was insufficient to maintain the action, taken by itself; that it is insufficient, because it does not allege that the plaintiff acted on the alleged fraudulent representations made by the defendants, which is necessary before-such representation can be made the foundation per se of the action, under §2958 of the Code, and the decision of this court in Larey vs. Taliaferro, 57 Ga., 443, 446. We cannot concur in this view. The whole purpose of this suit, as it seems to us, was to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, and we think it sufficiently appears from the state-m nts that the plaintiff believed such declarations to be true, and, so believing, acted upon them. It is true that the deed, with its warranties, is set out in the declaration as matter of inducement, and that it is further stated that the defendants fraudulently sold and warranted that the property conveyed was not subject to any liens, claims and iupumbrances; but this is the usual allegation in suits for deceit. See 2 Chitty’s Plead., 680, 681, and note, 687 et seq. The. case cited from 57 Ga. is an'authority upon the point that an express warranty, knowingly false, may be Avaived as a contract, and an action may be brought for the deceit. In Dye vs. Wall, 6 Ga., 584, recited in the case above, it was held by the court that, in the sale of a slave, • where there is a contract of warranty, the purchaser may consider the contract as a nullity, and bring his action on the case for deceit, and in such an action it is not necessary that he should set forth the contract, and that the bill of sale, although not described in the declaration, is admissible to, prove the sale.

If the declaration was defective in the respect pointed out, that would have been good ground for a demurrer, if it had been insisted upon at the trial; but such insuffi-. ciency would not, as we conceive, have been sufficient to [336]*336arrest the judgment, nor would it have the effect of changing entirely the character of the suit; it could not convert an action ex delicto into one ex contractu, which, as it strikes us, would have been the result of the view entertained by our esteemed brother of the circuit court bench.

The fact that the verdict rendered in the case was for the aggregate amount of five hundred and eighty-three dollars and seventy cents, made up of so much principal and so much interest, each specially found thereby, does not authorize or justify the conclusion that the cause of action was different from what it purported to be, as set forth in the plaintiff's declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Ga. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peel-v-bryson-ga-1884.