Perkins, Hopkins & White v. Patten
This text of 10 Ga. 241 (Perkins, Hopkins & White v. Patten) 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.
Opinion
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
[248]*248The jurisdiction for the trial of the cause is fixed by the Constitution to be in the County wherein the defendant resides. The suit was properly commenced in Marion County, as the defendants resided there at that time, but the new County of Macon being organized, in which the defendants resided, the suit was necessarily transferred, by operation of law, from the County of Marion to the new County of Macon for trial, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution. Such then, in our judgment, being the legal effect of the creation and organization of the new County, under the Constitution, in regard to the rights of the parties in the original suit and the trial thereof, the judgment rendered in the Inferior Court of Macon County is a good and valid judgment, and binding on the parties, until set aside for some other cause, if any exists.
The counsel for the plaintiff in execution requested the Court to charge the Jury, that “ If after the execution of the deed from defendant, Curtis, to Patten, the claimant, Curtis continued in possession of the property conveyed, or any part thereof, it was pima facie evidence of fraud as' against creditors, unless the possession was satisfactorily explained.”
The Court refused so to charge the Jury, but instructed them, “ That if Curtis remained in possession of only a part of the premises conveyed, (if the premises were in separate settlements,) then the possession was prima facie evidence of fraud only as to the part of the premises in the actual possession of the defendant,” &c. We think the Court erred in not giving the instruction as requested, and in giving the charge to the Jury as stated in the record. The idea of the Court appears to have been, as we understand it, that the possession of the vendor was only prima facie evidence of fraud as to the particular lot or [249]*249tract of land of which he remained in possession after the sale, whereas the fraud is alleged against the deed which conveys all the property. The plaintiff in execution alleges the deed of conveyance is fraudulent as against creditors, and that the defendant remaining in possession of part of the property conveyed, is the evidence of it; that such possession is a circumstance going to show a secret understanding between the parties, that the conveyance was made for the benefit of the debtor; that the possession of a part of the property conveyed by the vendor, is an evidence of a trust reserved between the parties, for tb e benefit of the vendor and his family, which goes to show the whole transaction to have been covinous, and evincing the intention of the parties, subject, however, to be satisfactorily explained, as was ruled by this Court in Peck vs. Land, 2 Kelly, 12. The request of the plaintiff’s counsel made to the Court to charge the Jury, embodies the legal principles applicable to this case, and, in our judgment, ought to have been given as requested. In the view which we have taken of this case, it will not be necessary to notice the other grounds of error taken in regard to the validity of the Kelsey fi. fa. or the refusal of the Court to postpone the trial of the cause, as the difficulties then suggested will doubtless be obviated on the new trial, if the position assumed by the counsel for the plaintiff in error be correct as to the original judgment.
Let the judgment of the Court below be reversed, and a new trial granted.
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10 Ga. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-hopkins-white-v-patten-ga-1851.