Satterfield v. Spier

39 S.E. 930, 114 Ga. 127, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 603
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 7, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 930 (Satterfield v. Spier) 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
Satterfield v. Spier, 39 S.E. 930, 114 Ga. 127, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 603 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

J. H. Spier brought suit against George W. Satterfield as administrator of Mrs. Emily P. Stegall, as principal, and George - W. Satterfield individually, as security, on two promissory notes. Pending the suit the plaintiff died, and his executrix, Mary Spier, was made a party plaintiff in bis stead. To the action Satterfield as administrator filed the following defenses: (1) There was a suit pending between the same parties relating to the same subject-matter, which at the date of the plea was pending in the Supreme Court on writ of error. (2) The consideration of the note sued on was the [128]*128purchase-money of land described in a bond for titles given by Spier to Mrs. Stegall, and the bond did not 'correctly describe the land purchased. (3) The consideration of the notes sued on has partially failed, for the reason that the notes were given in part payment of the purchase-money of land bought by Mrs. Stegall from Spier, and it was represented by him that she was to have, in connection with an eight-acre tract on the west side of the Etowah river in Cherokee county, Georgia, forty acres of good bottom land, to be surveyed off in a square as nearly as practicable, on the east side of the river; and when the land referred to in the bond for titles was attempted to be laid off by the surveyor, it was found that it was not practicable to lay off the same in a square, on account of conveyances which Spier had made to other persons of land which he owned on the east side of the river, and the only land which he owned on the east side of the river which could be conveyed to Mrs. Stegall was a tract in the shape of a triangle, very poor, and made of little value by washes and ditches. It is alleged in the plea that the representations made by Spier to Mrs. Stegall with reference to his ability and willingness to convey the forty acres of land in the shape of a square on the east side of the river were false and fraudulent, and such a mistake on the part of Spier as amounted to a fraud upon Mrs. Stegall, and that she signed the notes upon the faith of the representations so made. It is further alleged that the difference between the land which Spier represented himself as owning and intending to convey and the land which he was able to convey amounted to one thousand dollars. The prayer of the plea was that the balance due upon the purchase-money of the land might be reduced by whatever sum should be found by the jury to be the difference between the value of the land bargained and the value of the land which Spier was able to convey. Satterfield as an individual pleaded that he was induced to sign the notes as security by the fraudulent representations of Spier that Mrs. Stegall would have, when the land was surveyed off, forty acres of good bottom land on the east side of the Etowah river, in the shape of a square; that the forty acres of land so agreed to be conveyed was very valuable, being worth from thirty to forty dollars per acre; and that with the understanding that this land was to be described in the bond for titles and afterwards conveyed to Mrs. Stegall by Spier he signed his name to the notes as security. It is alleged [129]*129that, since the notes were signed, the defendant has made an effort by a competent surveyor to lay off on the east side of the Etowah river a tract of land according to the description in tbe bond for titles, and has found that it is impossible to lay off forty acres of land belonging to Spier of the character represented by him, and that the only land belonging to Spier on the east side of the river at the place mentioned in the bond for titles is about forty acres of land in the form of a triangle, of very inferior quality, covered with washes and ditches, and of much less value than the land he understood to have been bargained to Mrs. Stegall. The plea alleges that there was a plain and distinct representation by Spier to Satterfield that the forty acres to be conveyed to Mrs. Stegall was to be good bottom land and would be laid off in a square, and that this representation not only induced Mrs. Stegall to purchase the land, but also induced Satterfield to sign her notes as security; and this conduct on the part of Spier is alleged to be fraudulent. For these reasons Satterfield as security insists that his risk has been increased, and that therefore he is discharged from all liability on account of his contract of suretyship.

Attached to the plea was a copy of the record in the case of Satterfield v. Spier, referred to in the first paragraph of the plea filed by the defendants, which was pending in the Supreme -Court on writ of error at the time the plea -was filed. This proceeding appears to have been an equitable petition brought by Satterfield, individually and as administrator of Mrs. Stegall, against Spier and others, in which it was prayed that the court construe the bond for titles to mean that forty acres should be laid off in a described way set forth in the prayer, and if the court should not be able to so construe the bond as it was written, it be so reformed as to amount to a contract on the part of Spier to convey forty acres in the manner described; and that if forty acres can be laid off only in land embraced in a triangular shape, petitioner be held to be discharged from liability as surety on the notes, and that a failure of consideration, to an amount stated, be adjudged in favor of his intestate’s estate and deducted from the notes; and that Spier be enjoined from prosecuting any of the notes, except as he may set up the same in his answer to the petition. There was also a prayer for' general relief. To this petition the defendants interposed a demurrer upon the following grounds: No cause of action is set [130]*130forth; no reason is shown in law or in equity why the defendants should not be allowed to proceed to collect the past-due indebtedness ; no cause for injunction is shown; there is no allegation of insolvency ; and there is no reason set forth in the petition for the granting of either legal or equitable relief. This demurrer was sustained, and the case was brought, on writ of error, to the Supreme Court, where the judgment was affirmed. See Satterfield v. Spier, 112 Ga. 84. Subsequently to this, the present case came on to be tried. The plea setting up the pendency of another suit was not insisted on; and a motion was made by the plaintiff to strike the other pleas for various reasons. Upon this motion the court entered a judgment striking the pleas, reciting in the order that the plaintiff having demurred to the pleas upon the ground that they set forth no sufficient defense and contained no sufficient allegations of fraud, accident, or mistake, and it not appearing that the defendants used any diligence to foresee and prevent the consequences which they now seek to avoid, and it further appearing from the exhibit to the pleas that all the issues presented by the pleas have been adjudicated adversely to the defendants and that the subject-matter of these defenses is res adjudicata, the demurrers are sustained and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount sued for. To this judgment the defendants excepted.

1. The first plea of the defendant Satterfield, as administrator, was not insisted on. The second plea sets forth that the description of the land agreed to be conveyed in the bond for title is not the true description of the land which Spier intended to convey, and then proceeds to set forth what would be the true description of the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 930, 114 Ga. 127, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/satterfield-v-spier-ga-1901.