Smyth v. Nelson

68 S.E. 1032, 135 Ga. 96, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 422
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 1032 (Smyth v. Nelson) 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
Smyth v. Nelson, 68 S.E. 1032, 135 Ga. 96, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 422 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Holden, J.

Mrs. Margaret Smyth, filed a complaint against C. K. Nelson as trustee for the congregation of St. Luke’s Church, and the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Atlanta, a corporation, which was the successor in Fulton county, “as regards the subject-matter of this litigation, of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Georgia.” Along with other allegations, the petitioner made substantially the following: On April 25, 1904, she owned a certain piece of property in Atlanta, Georgia, hereinafter referred to as the residence lot, and on that date executed a writing of which the following is a copy, the detailed description of the property being omitted:

“Georgia, Fulton County. Having this day sold to the Et. Eev. C. K. Nelson, as Trustee for the Congregation of St. Luke’s Church, the property described as follows: [here follows description of a lot on Peachtree street, Atlanta, Ga.], and having been informed by Messrs. Lambert, DeSaussure, Williams, and Harrison, acting as a committee of the Vestry of said Church, that, in procuring the purchase of said property to be made, they were influenced by the fact that I had made a codicil to my will, bequeathing to the Diocese of Ga., to be used as a residence of the Bishop of Ga., the lot adjacent to the property hereinbefore described, on which adjacent lot is located my residence. • Now, therefore, in consideration of the foregoing premises, and of the sum of ten dollars paid by tlie said Trustee, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, 1 hereby agree and covenant with him, that, ,should 1 at any time be constrained by any cause to sell the said lot on which my said residence is located, the said Trustee or his successor in the office of Bishop shall have the option to buy the same at and for the sum of $25,000.00 for the said Diocese, to be used as a residence for its Bishop.
“This paper is -not intended and should not be construed to indicate any .purpose on my part to revoke said codicil by selling my said residence; but on the contrary it means that said codicil shall stand, and that my residence will not be sold unless I shall be constrained by circumstances requiring said sale. •
[98]*98“Witness my signature hereto affixed, this April 25th, 1904.
[Signed] Mrs. Maggie Smyth.”

The above writing was recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of Fulton county. At the date of its execution there was in existence a will of the plaintiff, in which she bequeathed her residence lot to the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Georgia, to be used as a residence for the Bishop of Georgia. She did not by the writing undertake to make the will then in existence irrevocable, nor was there any suggestion by any one that she would by said writing abridge her rights testamentary in said premises. Petitioner’s right to revoke the will is recognized in the writing. Circumstances were alleged by virtue of which it was averred she was constrained to sell the property, and on the 5th of May, 1909, she notified the trustee in writing of this fact and gave him the right to buy within a specified time for $25,000, and this option was later extended. Defendants refused to avail themselves of the opportunity to purchase the property, and ignored the notice, and threatened prospective purchasers to follow the property in their hands should they buy from the plaintiff; and are using the writing to injure and vex petitioner in her enjoyment of the property and to prevent her from selling it. It was prayed that the defendants be required to surrender up the writing and that the same be cancelled, and that the defendants be barred from asserting or claiming any interest in the residence lot. Defendants denied the right of the plaintiff to have the writing cancelled. They contended that-under the writing the plaintiff had no right to sell the residence property and revoke the codicil to her will, unless she was constrained for financial reasons to sell the residence lot. Defendants prayed for relief which will be fully set forth in this opinion. The ease was heard before the trial judge upon evidence taken by counsel and submitted to him. The plaintiff excepted to certain portions of the decree .rendered by the court, and to other portions the defendants excepted.

1. Defendants excepted to' that portion of the decree which is 'as follows: “It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed: (1) That the .causes of constraint, as that term is used in the writing marked Exhibit A to the petition, do not refer alone to financial causes; •the plaintiff’s financial condition is not passed upon by the court in this cause, but the court finds that there are causes other than [99]*99the plaintiff’s financial condition which justify the cancellation of said Exhibit A. (2) That the said contract or writing marked Exhibit A be and it is hereby cancelled, annulled, and held for naught, and is directed to be surrendered and cancelled of record.” A copy of the writing sought to be cancelled (set out in full in the statement of facts) was attached to the petition, and is the “Exhibit A” referred to in the decision. The. court committed no error in holding “That the causes of constraint, as that term is used in the writing marked Exhibit A to the petition, do not refer alone to financial causes.” In one clause in the writing the plaintiff covenanted and agreed that should she at any time “be constrained for any cause” to sell the residence lot, the 'trustee, or his successor, should have the option to buy it at $25,000. In the last clause preceding the attestation clause, it is stated that the lot would not be sold “unless I shall be constrained by circumstances requiring the sale.” Evidently the words “constrained by any cause,” and the words “constrained by circumstances requiring the sale,” did not mean that she could not sell unless constrained to do so because her financial condition or estate was such as to constrain her to do so. It did not bind her not to sell unless compelled to sell to raise money with which to support herself. The court treated the effect of the writing as creating a binding obligation on the maker not to sell unless constrained to do so from some cause or circumstances requiring it. Conceding, without deciding, that such was its legal effect, the- evidence was such as to authorize the finding by the court that the plaintiff was constrained to sell the residence lot from causes other than her financial condition, and the judgment of the court to this effect will not be disturbed. The record shows that the plaintiff gave to the defendants the option to buy the residence lot at $25,000, and they declined to avail themselves of the right to purchase it at that price. The defendants claimed that no cause or circumstances existed constraining the plaintiff to sell the residence lot, and that therefore she had no right to do so; and notified one to whom the plaintiff sought to sell the property that, should he buy it, they would at the proper time claim it. Having found that the plaintiff had the right to sell under existing causes and circumstances, the court committed no-error in ordering the writing cancelled.

2. The plaintiff excepted to that portion of the decree which is [100]*100as follows: “That the plaintiff is estopped by her conduct from erecting a building or any part thereof further westward or nearer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 1032, 135 Ga. 96, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smyth-v-nelson-ga-1910.