Robson v. Harwell

6 Ga. 589
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1849
DocketNo. 85
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 6 Ga. 589 (Robson v. Harwell) 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
Robson v. Harwell, 6 Ga. 589 (Ga. 1849).

Opinion

The Court not being unanimous, the Judges delivered their opinions seriatim.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion of the Court.

[596]*596I am unwilling to affirm the judgment of the Court below, so far as the real estate is concerned, and affirm it as to the personal property. The Statute of Frauds requires trusts of real estate to be manifested in writing. A deed was, in this case, executed from Robinson to Walton to the land in question. There was no declaration of a trust in writing as to the realty. So far as the land is concerned, as a general proposition, it is not questioned but that written evidence of a declaration of the trust is indispensable to take such a case out of the operation of the Statute.' The bill, however, sets up a parol declaration of a trust in behalf of Mrs. Harwell, as to both the personalty and the land; and, if I correctly understand it, it was filed to compel the administrator, without an allegation of fraud, to execute that trust. Although trusts of land must be generally proven by written testimony, yet Equity will execute a parol trust of land, upon the ground of fraud, in favor of the party injured. The decision of tho Judge below was founded on this exception to the general rule. It went upon the ground that Walton perpetrated a fraud upon the complainants, by failing, at or before his death, to convey or deliver the property to them, in pursuance of his verbal assurances to that effect — the Judge holding that such failure related back to the time when the agreement was entered into, and manifested a fraudulent intent at that time. To be, however, a little more explicit as to the opinion of the Court below : The Judge charged the Jury, “ that it was not necessary to prove that the fraudulent intent of Walton existed eo insianti with the making of the agreement to convey to Mrs. Harwell. If such an intent arose afterwards, and in pursuance of that intent to defraud Mrs. Harwell, Walton failed to do what he hadjcontracled to do, and on account of which he obtained the conveyance of the Gum Hill tract of land from Robinson, the law will evidence his intent by his acts, and connecting his failure to convey, with his original agreement to convey, it will presume the existence of that fraudulent intent on the part of Walton, at the time of the conveyance by Robinson.” I refer to the opinion of the Court, for the purpose of establishing the ground upon which the judgment goes. That ground is fraud.

[1.] To my mind no evidence of fraud could have been properly admitted under this bill, and no decree ought to have been rendered on the ground of fraud, because it malíes no issue of [597]*597fraud — it contains no charge of fraud — a,nd the defendant is not, therefore, notified to respond to any such allegation. The pleader who drafted this bill, could not have contemplated a recovery upon the ground of a fraud by Walton upon the rights of Mrs. Harwell; if he had, he would have said so. He would have brought it home to the conscience of the defendant, by direct, intelligible averments. He would have so framed his bill as not to have permitted the answer to evade the very point upon which his recovery is to rest. He would have so framed it, as that there could be no sort of doubt about his right to take testimony in relation to the fact of fraud. The bill before me was clearly filed for the purpose of relief against the failure of Walton to execute his trust agreement with Robinson; not because of his fraudulent intention, but because the contract or agreement, being an honest one in the beginning, was just such a contract as a Court of Equity would enforce. It sets up an agreement by which a trust is created, and by its averments and prayers demands an execution of it. It invokes the powers of a Court of Chancery to interpose in behalf of the cestui que trust. That I am right in this view of the bill, will appear from a brief analysis. It charges that Mrs. Harwell was born in 1804, and at the age of four days was adopted by Major Walton ; that in the year 1818, he being desirous of settling a plantation, and being well pleased with a lot of land belonging to her father, Capt. Littleberry Robinson, called the Gum Hill lot, importuned him to sell it to him; that Robinson finally, in December, 1818, did convey to him that tract of land, valued at $4000, and the stock upon it, valued at $500, in consideration of a promise and agreement there made and entered into by said Walton with him, that he, Walton, would put twenty negroes on the land, and add thereto such other land as might become necessary for said slaves and their increase to cultivate, during his. ( Walton’s) lifetime, and at his death, that he would deliver or convey, or cause to be conveyed to Mrs. Harwell, his adopted daughter, and who was the child of Robinson, the said Black Quyi Hill lot, with such other lands as might be added thereto, together with the twenty slaves and their increase, and such stock, plantation tools, furniture and utensils as might be on the place at his death; that the said Walton, the bill proceeds to charge, paid nothing for the land and stock on it; that in good faith Walton did put upon the plantation the twenty negroes, and purchased other lands adjoining and added [598]*598thereto; that he often, during his life, told the complainants and others, that that plantation and all that was on it, would belong to •them at his death. The bill farther charges, that Walton died without conveying the property, as agreed to be done, to Mrs. Harwell; it specifies the property and its value that was on the place at his death, and charges that it had been sold by Walton’s administrator. The prayer is, that the administrator be decreed to convey and deliver to the complainants the plantation, stock and negroes, such as they were at his death; and if the administrator shall answer that he has sold the property, so that the same cannot be conveyed and delivered, that he be required to pay out of the estate of Walton the full value thereof; or that he be decreed to pay the sum of four thousand dollars, with interest thereon from the time that Walton received the land ; also, there is a prayer for general relief.

I have not the bill before me. The foregoing analysis is taken from the bill of exceptions, and is, I have no doubt, correct. N ow, the sum and substance of it is, that the agreement made between these parties creates a trust, and not being consummated in Walton’s life time, will be enforced upon his representatives. That is the specific demand made by the complainants. The agreement, as charged, was fully proven, by the deed to the land from Robinson to Walton, and by parol. The parol testimony was objected to and admitted, and exception taken thereto. As the case stood by the pleadings, the complainants clearly relied upon the the agreement as declaring a trust of these lands, and they went for the execution of the trust. Does the bill, as I have represented it, go upon the idea of fraud — does it make any charge of fraud, or is there any issue of fraud made by it ? I think not. And ■none can be implied from the charges made, because it goes upon other and distinct grounds of equitable relief. I cannot consider it a case involving the principles upon which relief, in the execution of a parol trust, is granted upon the ground of fraud. The pleadings do not warrant the judgment, so far as the land is concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ga. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robson-v-harwell-ga-1849.