Stinson v. Daniel

20 S.E.2d 257, 193 Ga. 844, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 15, 1942
Docket14071.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 20 S.E.2d 257 (Stinson v. Daniel) 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
Stinson v. Daniel, 20 S.E.2d 257, 193 Ga. 844, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 491 (Ga. 1942).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

The ground of attack based on undue influence exerted over the grantor was unsupported by the evidence.

If the jury were authorized to find in favor of the complainants, it was because of the other ground of attack, to wit, the failure of delivery. The only person named as the grantee in the deed was Mrs. Stinson, who will be referred to herein as the grantee; and the proof is undisputed that the instrument never reached her until after the death of her father, the grantor. There is no conflict in the evidence bearing on the issue of delivery, except that one witness referred to the safe in which the deed was placed as that of the grantor, and another as his wife’s safe. Both witnesses were introduced by the defendant; the grantee testifying that it was Mrs. Fuqua’s safe, and not her father’s; that her father could not unlock it; that “she [Mrs. Fuqua] kept other papers in that safe, hers and papa’s too.” The other witness -was Mrs. Fuqua (since deceased), who testified: “I didn’t tell Mrs. Stinson [the grantee] about the deed, because I didn’t think I had the right to tell her about it. I didn’t hide that deed. It was in the safe at home. *848 He said he didn’t care who knew about it. He carried it home and put it in his safe. . . I didn’t tell Mrs. Stinson about the deed, and I don’t know who did. Mrs. Stinson found it out the next day after he was buried, and she came down, and then I went and got it right where Mr. Fuqua put it.” A third witness, L. E. Clark, testified on behalf of the plaintiff, that he was farming on the place with Mrs. Fuqua after the grantor’s death: “I knew that the iron safe was there, and saw it. I do not know whose it was. I don’t know whether Mr. Fuqua could open it or not. I opened it for Mrs. Fuqua while I was there. She couldn’t open it, and gave me the combination.” This was after the grantor’s death.

The grantor, sometime before the execution of the instrument, had one or more interviews with the attorney who had been accustomed to drafting his legal papers, on the subject of disposing of this property. His idea at first was that he probably wished to have a will drawn, but after a further conference he adopted the attorney’s suggestion to execute a deed instead. The scrivener testified that the grantor stated to him: “I want to leave my real estate that I have to Alice,” (speaking of Mrs. Stinson), and repeated the same thing again, saying that he had provided for his deceased daughter in a way that more than compensated them. “I said, ‘All right, Mr. Fuqua, have you got a description of the land?’» and he reached in his pocket and got out the deeds.” The grantor, his wife, and Mrs. J. E. Daniel went to the attorney’s office, and there the deed was executed. Before leaving the attorney’s office the grantor placed it in his pocket, the attorney having advised him to have it recorded; but he said he would do that later, that ■he then wanted to return to his home. This was on April 13, 1933. Eeturning to his home he put it in the safe. This safe contained private papers belonging to him, and private papers belonging to his,wife. His wife knew the combination of the safe. There was testimony that the grantor himself could not unlock it. Later J. E. Daniel, while passing by the home of the grantor, was invited by him to come in, and was told by him that he desired Daniel to take the deed to the clerk’s office at the court-house and have it recorded, and directed his wife to get it out of the safe, which she did, the grantor telling Daniel to leave it to be recorded, giving him the money to pay for recording it, and saying that he himself would get it later. The evidence is silent as to the return *849 of the deed after its record, but it was by some one replaced in the safe where it was formerly placed. The grantor’s daughter, Mrs. Stinson, to whom the deed was made, did not know of its execution until the day after her father’s burial, when she came to the home, and it was handed to her by her stepmother, she getting it out of the safe, although Mrs. Stinson testified that her father had previously spoken to her on the subject and said he was going to give her the property.

It does not definitely appear from the evidence whether the property described in the deed embraced the home of the grantor or not, or who was in possession at the time of the execution of the deed. But, so far as appears from the record, the grantor resided with his wife on this property at the time of his death.

The above is a complete summary of all the evidence before the jury on the question of delivery.

“The delivery of a deed is essential to the transfer of title. It is the final act without which all other formalities are ineffectual.” 1 Delvin on Beal Estate (3d ed.), § 260. The Code, § 29-101, declares that “A deed to lands must be in writing, signed by the maker, attested by at least two witnesses, and delivered to the purchaser, or someone for him, and be made on a valuable or good consideration.” The formal execution of the deed and the language of the attestation clause raised a prima facie presumption that the deed was delivered. Bourquin v. Bourquin, 110 Ga. 440, 446 (35 S. E. 710); Mays v. Fletcher, 137 Ga. 27-28 (72 S. E. 408). The deed was duly recorded. This also raised a prima facie presumption of delivery. Henderson v. Kemp, 155 Ga. 489, 492 (117 S. E. 244). Even if placed on record by the direction of the grantor, this amounts to no more than prima facie evidence of delivery. Wellborn v. Weaver, 17 Ga. 267 (63 Am. D. 235); Daniel v. Stinson, supra. “If, notwithstanding the recording, it be shown affirmatively that there was really no delivery, and that the intention to deliver was abandoned, the deed would be inoperative.” Gordon v. Trimmier, 91 Ga. 472 (18 S. E. 404). In Rushin v. Shields, 11 Ga. 636 (5) (56 Am. D. 436), it was said: “If a deed be signed and sealed, and declared by the grantor in the presence of the attesting witnesses, to be delivered as his deed, it is an effectual delivery, provided there be nothing to qualify the delivery, notwithstanding the grantee was not present, nor any *850 person in his behalf, and the deed remained under the control of the grantor.” The case did not involve the question whether, if a deed was signed, sealed, and declared by the* grantor in the presence of attesting witnesses to be delivered as his deed, this was an effectual delivery; and therefore the statement quoted in the headnote in the Bushin case, supra, is not an authority. Nor was this question involved in Holly v. Whitehurst, 164 Ga. 265, 270 (138 S. E. 231), where the quoted words from the Bushin ease were used in the opinion. The proposition asserted in these two cases is not believed to be sound, and apparently overlooks the code section which is elsewhere quoted in this opinion, to the effect that one of the requisites of a deed is that it must be delivered to the purchaser.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E.2d 257, 193 Ga. 844, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stinson-v-daniel-ga-1942.