Sparks v. Bell

30 S.E.2d 911, 198 Ga. 156, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 353
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 6, 1944
Docket14889.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 S.E.2d 911 (Sparks v. Bell) 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
Sparks v. Bell, 30 S.E.2d 911, 198 Ga. 156, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 353 (Ga. 1944).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

The first assignment of error relates to the refusal to grant a continuance on account of the absence of two witnesses. The showing was made by the husband of the plaintiff. His testimony was as follows: “I am the husband of Mrs. Venice Sparks. As her husband I have been assisting her in *157 preparing this case. There are some witnesses, who have been summonsed, who have not answered — W. F. Garner and Newman Lewis. I expect to prove the contract that we are putting out in case we are contending for by Newman Lewis. He has been summonsed. I summonsed him. I think the sheriff delivered it. I got a summons from the clerk, and gave it to the sheriff. I presume the sheriff'delivered it. I gave him the summons before the last term of court. I don’t know that I have talked with him about it — well, yes, I think one time since then. Q. Tell us what he said he would swear about it? A. He talked to papa about it, and papa told him about the contract- — that he told my wife that he would give her the place if she would stay there and take care of him and wait on him. The witness lives in this county. Q. Are you making this motion for the purpose of delay, or for the purpose of getting the witness here ? A. For the purpose of getting the witness here. Q. Any other witness that you can prove this particular fact by? Is that all the witness you can prove it by? Is that all you can prove by the witness? A. Well, similar. Q. Is there any other witness that you can prove all of it by, all the facts that you can prove by this witness ? A. No, sir, I don’t think so. I expect to prove by Mr. W. F. Garner possession and residence, that we took over with the place and the responsibility, the protection and responsibility. He had a conversation with my father about it. He lives about two and a half miles from where my father lived. Papa was ten or twelve years older than he was. Mr. Garner has been summonsed, summonsed before the other court. I have talked with him about it. It has been a good bit since I talked with him about it. I saw him last night but did not mention coming to court. I imagine he knows this subpoena requires him to come to court. I am making this motion for the purpose of getting the witness here. I do not know why Newman Lewis is absent. I do not know where he works. I do not know why Mr. Garner is absent. Both of the gentlemen live in this county. I was talking to one of them last night, but did not mention his coming.” Counsel for the plaintiff: “That is our showing, Your Honor.” The court: “Well then, with that showing, gentlemen, I overrule the motion for a continuance. If you want attachments for them, the court will give you attachments.” Counsel for the plaintiff: “No, sir, we do not want to attach them and put them *158 to that cost.” The plaintiff herself, although present in court, did not testify on this motion.

We are of the opinion that the trial judge on this showing did not abuse his discretion in refusing to continue the case.

The remaining exception is to the grant of a nonsuit. . The only ruling which a motion to nonsuit invokes is, whether the plaintiff proved her case as laid, without establishing such additional facts as disproved her right to recover. Clark v. Bandy, 196 Ga. 546 (27 S. E. 2d, 17). The determination of such an issue requires a consideration of the petition and of the evidence, and a comparison of the two.

The petition sought specific performance of an alleged contract between the plaintiff and J. E. Sparks, deceased; that title to certain land, the subject-matter of the suit, be decreed in her; that a sale of the property under certain judgments against J. E. Sparks be enjoined; and that the judgments be decreed null and void. As the basis of these prayers, she alleged a contract between herself and J. E. Sparks, her late father-in-law, by the terms of which, if she would remain with him in his home so long as he lived, and would continue to render the same services she had been rendering, he would give her all he had, and would make her a deed to the home where they lived, but that he died before making said deed. She alleged that on June 5, 1924, J. E. Sparks executed a deed to the same property, purporting to secure an indebtedness in stated amounts, to EL B. Sparks, T. R. Sparks, and J. C. Sparks; that said deed was without consideration and totally void, and was not and is not a valid encumbrance on the lands he promised to convey to her> the deed having been made to save said land after the failure of a certain bank in which he had been a director or officer of some kind. Her original petition contained an allegation that J. E. Sparks made her the offer in June, 1925, when she had the opportunity of taking a position with South Western College at Americas, Georgia, for a good salary; that she was considering the matter and intended to accept the position; but that, “when the said J. E. Sparks made petitioner the promise to give her all he had and make her a deed to all the land he had, she considered it, and a little later told him she would continue to stay with them and do for them as she had been doing. Petitioner then gave up the idea of going to Americus, Georgia, *159 .and accepting college work there.” By an amendment she fixed the time when he made her the offer to give her his property as “during the summer of the year 1918, during the month of July.” By this same amendment paragraph 4 of the petition, which has been first quoted above, was amended so as to make it read as follows: “When the said J. E. Sparks repeated his promise to give her all he had and make her a deed to the land he had, she considered it, and a little later told him she would continue to stay with them and do for them as she had been doing. Petitioner then gave up the idea of going to Amerieus, Georgia, and accepting college work there.” Fairly construed, her allegations with respect to her acceptance of his offer, so as to make the alleged contract binding, was after she had received the offer to go to Amerieus, which as heretofore seen was- in June, 1925.

The evidence of her husband fixed the date of her acceptance as “about July, 1918.” The plaintiff herself gave testimony as to other matters, but fixed no date. No other witness testified as to the date that she accepted the offer of J. E. Sparks. It takes offer and acceptance to make a contract. Therefore the proof failed to support the allegations of her petition as to the date of the contract which she relied upon. While ordinarily a difference between the allegata and- probata as to the date of the contract might not be fatal, it is fatal in this case, because the record shows that Sparks executed the deed, which is here under attack, on June 5, 1924, whereas the contract which it is alleged he made with the plaintiff, and which she seeks here to enforce, was made subsequently to June, 1925. Under these circumstances, the date of her alleged contract was most material. When the proof came in, it showed that she was not in position to attack the deed which had been theretofore made. She failed to prove her case in another respect. She attacked for fraud the deed given to secure the alleged indebtedness, and the judgment founded on the evidence thereof, on the ground that they were without consideration, and that the deed was made to save his land after the failure of a bank in which he was a director or officer.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E.2d 911, 198 Ga. 156, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-bell-ga-1944.