Rawlins v. Shropshire

45 Ga. 182
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 Ga. 182 (Rawlins v. Shropshire) 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
Rawlins v. Shropshire, 45 Ga. 182 (Ga. 1872).

Opinion

Warner, Chief Justice.

On the 12th day of June, 1869, the heirs-at-law of F. C. Shropshire brought an action of ejectment against J. C. Rawlins to recover the possession of a tract of land in the county of Floyd, containing twenty-seven and one-half acres, being the place whereon F. C. Shropshire formerly resided. The plaintiffs are the widow and children of F, C. Shropshire, When the case was called for trial the defendants made a motion for a continuance, on the ground that they desired to file a bill on the equity side of the Court to bring other parties before the Court, and set up certain equities against the plaintiff’s right to recover in the action of ejectment, stating to the Court the facts which constituted their equitable defense. The Court overruled the motion, on the ground that under the existing laws of this State new parties could be made, and the rights of all could be settled on equitable principles in the present action. The defendant then amended his plea, [184]*184setting forth his equitable grounds for relief, and the Court granted an order making Wesley Shropshire, administrator of F. C. Shropshire, a party plaintiff, and also making J. P. Hults, through whom defendant claimed title, a party defendant. The cause then proceeded to trial, when the following facts, in substance, were proved as disclosed by the record. In the summer of 1862, F. C. Shropshire, a short time before he left home to enter the Confederate service, told the witness, Johnson, that he was then preparing to enter the service, and needed all the money he then had, but said he had put his place (the property in dispute) in the hands of Mr. Stevens, for sale, and, so soon as he made sale of it, would then be able to pay all his debts ; said he could not pay his debts until the property was sold; requested the witness to assist Stevens in the sale of it, and if he could find any one wishing to purchase to send them to Stevens; said his price for the property was $5,000.

On the 18th of November, 1862, Hults purchased the property of Stevens, as the agent of F. C. Shropshire, and paid him therefore the sum of $5,000 in cash. The money was raised by calling in loans made previous to the war, receiving the Confederate money paid for the land. from his debtors as gold, dollar for dollar. Shropshire was living at the time of the purchase of the property, but died shortly afterwards, before a deed was executed. Stevens, the agent, is also dead. After the sale of the property by Stevens to Hults, Mrs. Shropshire, the widow and her children, vacated the premises, and Hults took possession of it under the purchase from Stevens, as the agent of Shropshire, on the 1st of March, 1863, and continued in possession of it until 1866, when he sold it to Cleaves for $5,000 cash. Shortly after the death of F. C. Shropshire, his father, Wesley Shropshire, became the administrator on his estate, and executed a bond to make a title to the property in which it is recited: “Whereas, Francis C. Shropshire, in his lifetime, by his agent, J. R. Stevens, did sell the place where he resided near Rome, Geor[185]*185gia, for the sum of $5,000.” This bond is dated on the 26th December, 1862, when all the facts relating to the sale of the property may fairly be presumed to have been well known to the parties interested. On the 31st of October, 1866, Wesley Shropshire, the administrator, made a deed to the property to Cleaves by the consent of Hults, who had sold the property to Cleaves. In this deed it is recited that, “Whereas, Francis C. Shropshire did, in his lifetime, by his agent, J. R. Stevens, sell his residence near Rome, and the lands thereunto belonging, being about twenty-seven and a half acres of land, and did then depart this life intestate without executing title thereto, and afterwards the said Cleaves did pay me, the administrator of the said Francis C. Shropshire, the purchase money to-wit, $5,000, which I was enabled to apply to the payment of the debts of said estate.”

This deed was written by Judge Wright, the father of Mrs. Shropshire and the grandfather of her children, who are the plaintiffs in the ejectment suit, and was executed by the paternal grandfather of the children. Hults swearsffhat the deed was prepared by Judge Wright and handed to him by Judge Wright, who assured him the deed was good and conveyed a perfect title to Cleaves. Judge Wright, who was examined as a witness, admits writing the deed, but denies telling Hults the title was good. Hults asked him to write the deed and paid him for writing it. The reason why the deed was made direct to Cleaves instead of to Hults was to save stamps. Wesley Shropshire, who was examined as a witness, states that Judge Wright advised him to accept the money and pay Francis’ debts ; that he has paid all the debts with the money except one. In his return to the Court of Ordinary, Wesley Shropshire charges himself with the following receipt: “Received December 26th, 1862, of J. R. Stevens, $5,000 in full for the purchase of F. C. Shropshire’s house and lands on the Calhoun Road, one and one-fourth miles from the city of Rome, Georgia. Wesley Shropshire,. [186]*186administrator of F. C. Shropshire, deceased.” The original receipt was read in evidence and proved to have been written by Judge Wright, (as well as the bond,) who was the legal adviser of the administrator. The return also shows the payment of debts of F. C. Shropshire to the amount of $4,750. No other property belonging to the intestate’s estate except the $5,000 mentioned in the receipt to Stevens for the proceeds of the sale of the premises in dispute, appears in the retuims of the administrator to the Court of Ordinary: In December, 1868, Cleaves sold the property to Rawlins for $6,000, who made valuable improvements on it worth $1,200. Cleaves was dead at the time of the trial.

There is other testimony in the record, but the foregoing recital embodies the main facts which must control our judgment. The jury, after hearing the charge of the Court, returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiffs the premises, together with $1,452 for rents ; and find for the defendants $5,000 and interest on the same from the 18th day of November, 1862, to date, and in addition thereto the sum of $1,200, and interest on that amount from the 27th day of July, 1864, for improvements, and plaintiffs to pay the costs of suit. This 27th July, 1871. Eben Hillyer, foreman.” On this special verdict of the jury the Chancellor ordered the following decree to be entered : “It is ordered adjudged and decreed by the Court, that the said heirs of Francis C. Shropshire do recover of the said J. C. Rawlins and his tenants the premises in dispute, and that the Clerk do issue the usual writ of possession for said premises after the expiration of thirty days from this date, and that the rents be set off against the improvements as the value of the improvements made by Rawlins, and interest thereon just equals the rents. And that John P. Hults do recover of Wesley Shropshire, as the administrator of Francis C. Shropshire, deceased, the sum of $5,000 principal, and the sum of $3,042 07 interest to date; and that the defendants recover of plaintiffs the sum of ......dollars, costs of [187]*187suit. August 9th, 1871. J. R. Parrott, Judge, presiding.” This decree is excepted to, and also the charge of the Court to the jury is excepted to.

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45 Ga. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawlins-v-shropshire-ga-1872.