Ross v. Campbell

73 Ga. 309
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 73 Ga. 309 (Ross v. Campbell) 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
Ross v. Campbell, 73 Ga. 309 (Ga. 1884).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

The plaintiff, as administrator of Perry Dillard, brought suit in the statutory form for the recovery of the premises in question, which consisted of a half lot number 7, block 26, on Mulberry street, in the city of Macon, together with mesne profits, against Campbell and Rogers, who are the duly qualified executors of the last will of William Dillard, late of Bibb county, deceased. He claims under a deed executed by the. testator of defendants, William Dillard, [311]*311to his intestate, which bears date the 6th day of May, 1S47, was attested by two witnesses, one of whom was a justice of the peace, and was duly recorded in the proper office on the day after it bears date, for an expressed consideration of three hundred dollars. It conveys the land therein described, and purports on its face to have been “ delivered.” There seems to have been no change of possession of the premises after the execution of the deed. Perry Dillard shortly after that time removed to and resided in the state of Alabama, and thenceforth continued to reside there until his death, which occurred in 1859. William Dillard resided continuously in Macon until his death, on the 23d of May, 1883; in 1849 and 1850, he returned this lot to the receiver of taxes for the city as the property of Perry Dillard and as his agent; how it was returned in 1848, the year following that in which the deed was executed, does not appear, as the tax digest for that year was proved tó have been lost. After 1850, it appears that William Dillard gave in this lot and paid taxes for it in his own name, and as his own property; he also improved it by erecting several buildings ón it at .his own expense j he rented these buildings and received the income from them. There is nothing in the record to show that he kept or rendered an account of this income to Perry Dillard or his successors; it is possibly true that he did not, as he devised it by his last will, executed two days.before his death, to his daughter, Mrs. O’Connor. Shortly after executing his will, he delivered to one of his executors a tin box, which he said contained his deeds; among those in the box. this deed was found by his executors, and produced on the trial of this case under a notice served upon them. It appears from the evidence that there was a house of two rooms and a kitchen on the lot when it. was conveyed by William to Perry Dillard; it is pretty clear,however, that no improvements were put on it by William until after the death of Perry Dillard; indeed, most of them were made three or four years after the close of the late war in 1865, or [312]*312as defendant’s witnesses say, in 1871 or 1872 ; it was shown that before the improvements were made, the property was worth for rent $8.00 per month, and afterwards $21.00. Mrs. Wynn, the sister of the Dillards, testified that Perry was in Macon in 18-17, the year the deed was made, and had not been there since; she also testified to a conversa ■ tion with William Dil’ard in March, 1883, in which he said to her that the lot sued for was not his, but belonged to Perry Dillard, who bought it when he was last in Macon, and left it with him. On Thursday before his death on Sunday, in another conversation with this witness in the presence of his daughter, Mrs. O’Connor, he said that the house and lot in which he lived he had bought and paid for with his own money, but as for the lot and houses in dispute, he said, “ I have not got the scratch of a pen to show for them.” When asked where the deed was, he replied, “ It is in the court house.” An attempt was made to impeach this witness, as to both these conversations, by showing that immediately after the last took place, she went into the kitchen, and said in the presence of Mrs. O’Connor and the cook, whose name was Charity, “ As long as 1 have known William Dillard,” or “ as much talk as he and I have had about this property, I never heard before that the, deed was in Periy.” This conversation she flatly denied, and said she did not go into the kitchen at all on that occasion; that she conversed with Mrs. O’Connor on the piazza about an entirely different matter, and left for her home to get rest, as she would have to sit up again that night. The woman, Charity, was not sworn at all, but Mrs. O’Connor was, and gave this account of the matter on her direct examination: “She,” Mrs. Wynn, “said she never heard my father say before that day that that deed was in Perry’s name. Never before that day had heard him say that there was a deed in Perry’s name.” On her cross examination, she stated that Mrs. Wynn came into the kitchen where she and Charity were, sat down in a chair near Charity’s bed, and said, “ Well, as [313]*313much talk as me and William have had together, I never knew that that deed stood in the way it did before; never hoard him say so before.” Admitted that her father said in the conversation testified to by .Mrs. Wynn, that the property was in Perry Dillard, but didn’t hear him say that the deed was recorded at the court house. Mrs. Wynn did not swear to anything said about the deed by William Dillard in the conversation that previously took place between them in March, 1883. There was nothing, therefore, in her conversation with Mrs. O'Connor and Charity, admitting that it took place as stated by Mrs. O’Connor, at all in conflict with any portion of the account she gave of the first conversation between her and William. The material portion of the last conversation was testified to by Mrs. O’Connor, viz.: that her father said “ the property was in Perry Dillard’s name.” She, however, did not hear him say that the “ deed was recorded,” or “ was at the court house.” There is no positive denial of this part of the conversation. She did not hear it; her evidence on this point is merely negative and amounts to nothing. It is significant, too, that the woman, Charity, was not brought forward on this occasion to testify to these alleged contradictory statements of this important witness. She further testified that when William Dillard revealed this fact, Mrs. O'Connor remarked, “ If we lose this property, we shall lose much.’’ This is not denied; neither was the statement of Mrs. Wynn, that Dillard, in his last sickness, and about this time, seemed greatly troubled about this property.

A further attempt was made to discredit Mrs. Wynn by showing that she was inimical to Mrs. O’Connor, in consequence of her father’s having destroyed a former will, in which Mrs. Wynn’s son was made his legatee, and prompted by these feelings, she sought out the family of Perry Dillard and gave them information of Perry’s title to this property. Mrs. Wynn denied that she entertained such feelings to Mrs. O’Connor, or that she was actuated by the [314]*314motive attributed to her in imparting the information to the family of Perry Dillard. She says that the first will was intended to subserve a temporary purpose and prevent the marriage of Mrs. O’Connor with her husband; that, subsequently to the marriage and during testator’s sickness, Mrs. O’Connor was by her request permitted to read the will; that the testator then ordered it to be burned, and it was burned by Mrs. O’Connor; that she was at the house of William Dillard when the last will was written; was not in his room, but in the kitchen, when it was executed. The widow of Perry Dillard, in answer to interrogatories, testified that she had seen this'deed in her husband’s possession, that she had his papers after his death, and that this must have been lost or stolen when she removed from Alabama to .Mississippi, after her husband’s death.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ga. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-campbell-ga-1884.