Skinner v. Moye

69 Ga. 476
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 19, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 Ga. 476 (Skinner v. Moye) 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
Skinner v. Moye, 69 Ga. 476 (Ga. 1882).

Opinion

Speer, Justice.

The plaintiffs in error made their application to foreclose a mortgage on certain lands of the defendant, to recover the amount due on a note secured by the mortgage, made by the defendant in error, payable to the plaintiffs, for the sum of eight hundred and thirty dollars principal, besides interest, and which was given as the last [478]*478.payment due on the land mortgaged, and which land had been sold by the plaintiffs to the defendant. To this ■petition to foreclose the defendant filed his plea, alleging •.that the note on which the foreclosure is sought was the '¡balance due for the purchase money of the land mort-gaged, and that the deed given by the plaintiffs to defend, ant had therein a covenant of warranty, which warranty had failed, and defendant was compelled to pay out eleven hundred dollars to perfect and protect said title, and this sum plaintiffs should allow defendant, and the mortgage for this cause should not be enforced against him.

Under the evidence and charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. A motion for new trial was made, which was refused, and plaintiffs excepted.

The evidence discloses the following statement of facts : That the land mortgaged was purchased by Jesse J. Skinner at a sale made by the administrator of —■— Brown, deceased, who was the father of Mrs. Skinner, said sale taking place since the year 1866 ; that as part payment for skid land, the distributive share of Mrs. Skinner, as one of the heirs at law of the intestate, was appropriated, amounting to about the sum of eight hundred dollars, the same being her separate estate; that after said purchase and payment for said land, Jesse J. Skinner, as the head of a family, had laid off to him a homestead in realty for the benefit of his wife and family in the land so purchased, subject to the dower of the widow therein; that afterwards, Skinner and his wife, being desirous of selling said lands, with and under the approval of the ordinary, sold and conveyed the same to the defendant in error subject to the widow’s dower, the body of land containing six hundred and sixty-six acres, for the sum of six thousand three hundred and thirty-dollars. The conveyance recited, “that the said James J. Skinner had laid off to him, as the head of a family, a homestead in realty for the benefit of his wife, Eliza, and family, con[479]*479taining six hundred and sixty-six acres, and the said Jesse J. Skinner and Eliza, his wife, being desirous to sell and dispose of the same, with and under the approval of the ordinary, did, in and for the consideration, sell and convey the same, etc.” The deed was jointly executed by Skinner and wife, and approved by the ordinary, and bore date on the 8th November, 1873.

It further appears that at the time of the execution of said deed, F. W. Sims & Co. held an. execution against James J. Skinner for the sum of $8,000.00 principal, dated on 17th January, 1872, issuing upon a judgment rendered on the .5th December, 1871, on a debt contracted since 1868, which was unsatisfied ; that pending the negotiations for the sale of said land by the Skinners to the defendant, this judgment and its lien and effect on the title was discussed between the parties'. The testimony on this point was conflicting, Skinner testifying that, on account of a reduction of three hundred dollars in the price, the defendant purchased said land, agreeing to take the risk of the title, while the defendant and another witness testified that Skinner agreed that he would protect the defendant against said judgment, and it could be done, if necessary, by the payments or installments to become due on the land, as he, defendant, would have the same in his hands.

It further appears, after the sale of the land, the note upon which a recovery is now sought, and which was the last installment due, was, on the 12th day of June, 1876, duly assigned in writing by Jesse J. Skinner to his wife, Eliza J. Skinner, with the mortgage, in consideration of her separate interest in said land arising from the payment of her distributive share in her father’s ■ estate, applied to the purchase thereof at the administrator’s sale.

On the 10th day of January, 1877, F. W. Sims & Co. caused their ft. fa. against Jesse J. Skinner to be levied “on the reversionary interest of the defendant in ft. fa. after the termination of the homestead estate (with the exception of the widow’s dower) on the land ” purchased [480]*480by the defendant below, the same was sold and purchased at sheriff’s sale at the price of eight hundred dollars, the vendee, Moye, interposing no claim to said property or any objection to the sale. For this amount paid out by him, as he alleges, to protect the title he had purchased of plaintiffs, he sets it up as a bar to the recovery on the foreclosure sought, and claims that there has been a breach of the covenant of warrantee made by the plaintiffs in their sale of the land to the defendant, and for this cause plaintiffs are not entitled to recover.

1. Whatever interest Mrs. Skinner may have had in this land by having contributed to its payment out of her separate property, is a matter alone between herself and her husband. There is nothing in the record that shows that the defendant, Moye, had any notice that she had any interest in it. The deed from the administrator was made to her husband alone, and as his property he exempted it by a homestead estate. His wife joined him in the conveyance to Moye, and this estops her from asserting any title or interest in the land as her separate property under the facts proved.

Was it competent, over objection, to prove by Moye and Graybill the facts testified to by them as to what Skinner said about protecting Moye from the Sims fi- fct., on the ground that all declarations antecedent to the deed and the whole prior negotiations are merged in the written conveyance, and that parol evidence was not admissible to vary the contract between the parties? The rule is, that where there are liens upon or any defect in the title, known to the party purchasing, a general unanimity is not presumed to cover such defects, unless expressly so intended. But whether such known defects or liens are intended so to be covered, is a question of fact, and parol evidence is admissible to establish such fact. Code, 2655.

Here the plaintiffs in error insisted that as the defendant, at and before the purchase, knew of the existence of the Sims fi.fa. and its lien upon the property of Skinner, [481]*481that the general covenant of warranty in the deed they made to Moye was not intended to cover this lien upon or defect in the title. But whetherdt was so intended was a question of proof, and parol evidence was properly admitted to establish it. We see, therefore, no error in admitting the testimony of Moye and Graybillon this ground, as complained of.

2. The main question in the case is, whether the sale of the reversionary interest in this land was such a breach of the covenant of warranty in plaintiffs deed as entitles the defendant below to an abatement of the price agreed to be paid for the land, and whether the cost and expense incurred by defendant in purchasing such reversionary interest can be pleaded to this suit for the purchase money.

Thisland was the property of Jesse J. Skinner. Out of it he had procured to be set apart a homestead estate that protected both the homestead and reversionary interest from levy and sale under the Sims

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Bluebook (online)
69 Ga. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-moye-ga-1882.