Smith v. Merck

57 S.E.2d 326, 206 Ga. 361, 1950 Ga. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1950
Docket16879
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 57 S.E.2d 326 (Smith v. Merck) 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
Smith v. Merck, 57 S.E.2d 326, 206 Ga. 361, 1950 Ga. LEXIS 354 (Ga. 1950).

Opinion

Almand, Justice.

(a) Where one expressly authorizes another to act for him in a particular transaction, the relation of principal and agent arises. Code, § 4-101. “The word ‘agency,’ both in law and as used in every-day affairs, may have various meanings. It may refer, and perhaps most often does, to that relation ‘created by express or implied contract or by law, whereby one party delegates the transaction of some lawful business with more or less discretionary power to another, who undertakes to manage the affair and render, to him an account thereof.’ Burkhalter v. Ford Motor Co., 29 Ga. App. 592, 599 (116 S. E. 333), citing 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 937; Atlanta Accident As so. v. Bragg, 102 Ga. 748 (29 S. E. 706). The American Law Institute, in defining the word ‘agency,’ adopted the almost universally recognized definition as follows: ‘Agency is the relationship which results from the manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall act on his behalf and subject to his control, and consent by the other so to act.’ Restatement, Agency, § 1.” Washington National Ins. Co. v. Savannah, 196 Ga. 126, 129 (26 S. E. 2d, 359).

(b) Loyalty to his principal is the primary obligation of the agent. Code, § 4-205; Sessions v. Payne, 113 Ga. 955 (39 S. E. 325); Arthur v. Ga. Cotton Co., 22 Ga. App. 431 (2) (96 S. E. 232). The relation of principal and agent is a fiduciary one, and if the agent obtains any advantage or profit out of the relationship to the injury of the principal, he becomes a trustee. Stover v. Atlantic Ice & Coal Corp., 154 Ga. 228 (1) (113 S. E. 802).

(c) “Where by the act or consent of parties, or the act of a third person or of the law, one person is placed in such relation to another that he becomes interested for him or with him in any subject or property, he is prohibited from acquiring rights in *369 that subject or property antagonistic to the person with whose interest he has become associated.” Code, § 37-708. This section is a codification of the principle of law found in Larey v. Baker, 86 Ga. 468, 474, 475 (12 S. E. 684), which was taken from the enunciation of the principle stated in 1 Am. &.Eng. Enc. Law, 375. Where a vendor of land acted upon the advice of an agent or friend and confidential adviser, and made to the vendee a deed instead of a bond for title, and took notes for the deferred payment of the purchase-money, believing under the advice given that the land would be subject to the purchase-money, and the agent or friend thereafter bought the land from the original vendee, equity will relieve the vendor against the effect of the deed, and subject the land to the payment of the purchase-money, although the agent or friend practiced no fraud in inducing the vendor to make the deed. Hawk v. Leverett, 71 Ga. 675. In the opinion the court said: “It will make no difference that, at the time Leverett gave the advice to plaintiff to make the deed to Lane, he acted honestly and believed his advice to be correct, and did not then have in contemplation himself the purchase of the land from Lane. He knew, at the time he did purchase the land from Lane, what advice he had given, and that plaintiff acted upon such advice; his act in purchasing the land from Lane was an act calculated to deprive plaintiff of part, if not the whole, security for the purchase money, which she had taken under his advice. This conduct on his part is fraudulent in law, however honest he may have been when he gave the advice.” P. 677.

(d) Fraud will authorize equity to cancel and annul a deed, no matter how solemnly executed. Code, § 37-709. While the terms of an absolute deed cannot be varied by limiting the grantee to a use of the land in a manner not restricted by the express terms of the deed, it may nevertheless be alleged and proved that it was induced by fraud, without denying or varying any of the stipulations or conditions contained in the deed. Baker County Power Co. v. Adkins, 169 Ga. 187 (1) (149 S. E. 910). Where land is owned by two persons, and one obtains a deed from the other to his interest by means of an intentionally false and fraudulent promise to sell the land at its true value and pay off an encumbrance and account for the balance, or failing to *370 find a purchaser, he will procure a new loan to discharge the present encumbrance, and after obtaining the title he retains and claims the property as absolutely his own, this transaction by which the ownership is obtained is such a fraud as will entitle the grantor to have the deed canceled. Equity will afford relief, not because of the mere breach of a verbal promise, but because of the fraud of the grantee in procuring an absolute deed to be made to him upon his false and fraudulent representation and promise that he will use the title for the grantor’s benefit. Jones v. McElroy, 134 Ga. 857 (1, 2) (68 S. E. 729). Where the allegations of a petition show that the promise of the grantee was the consideration inducing execution of a deed, and that it was made with the present intention on the part of the grantee not to comply with it, such petition sets forth a cause of action for cancellation. Johnson v. Johnson, 152 Ga. 300 (110 S. E. 211); Williford v. Swint, 181 Ga. 44 (181 S. E. 227); Pantone v. Pantone, 202 Ga. 733 (2) (44 S. E. 2d, 548).

(e) As a general rule, a petition in equity which seeks to cancel a deed representing a conveyance of property, but which does not allege the return or the offer to return the consideration prior to institution of the suit, is demurrable. Cabaniss v. Dallas Land Co., 144 Ga. 511 (87 S. E. 653); Williams v. Fouché, 157 Ga. 227 (121 S. E. 217). This rule is based on the equitable maxim that he who would have equity must do equity. Code, § 37-104. There are exceptions to this rule. Bowden v. Achor, 95 Ga. 243 (14) (22 S. E. 254); Timmerman v. Stanley, 123 Ga. 850 (5) (51 S. E. 760). A party is not obliged to return that which he will be entitled to retain, as a condition to a cancellation; so, if a plaintiff has received no more than he was entitled to, his offer to account for the same in adjustment of the differences between the parties sufficiently meets the requirement that he who seeks equity must do equity. Collier v. Collier, 137 Ga. 658 (3) (74 S. E. 275); Williford v. Swint, 181 Ga. 44 (2) (supra).

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.E.2d 326, 206 Ga. 361, 1950 Ga. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-merck-ga-1950.