Strickland v. Jones

62 S.E. 322, 131 Ga. 409, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 19, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 322 (Strickland v. Jones) 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
Strickland v. Jones, 62 S.E. 322, 131 Ga. 409, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 218 (Ga. 1907).

Opinion

Fish, C. J.

J ethro J ones & Son sued out an attachment against T. J. Strickland as a fraudulent debtor, alleging in the petition, verified by a member of the firm on November 30, 1898, that the defendant was indebted to them in a named amount upon certain described promissory notes, upon which suit was then pending in the superior court; that, for the purpose of defeating and defrauding them, he had executed a deed conveying certain land to his wife, which he had previously agreed to convey to them as security for such indebtedness; that he had also executed fraudulent mortgages, transfers, and assignments of other property of his, and was threatening to dispose of all the balance of his property, all for the purpose of defeating and defrauding the plaintiffs. The attachment was issued on December 1, 1898; and on December 3, 1898, it was levied upon several tracts of land as the property of the defendant, to which Mrs. F. E. Strickland, his wife, interposed a claim. Plaintiffs filed a declaration in attachment in the superior court. While the common-law and attachment suits were pending the defendant died, and the administrator upon his estate was made party defendant in his stead. By an order of court the attachment case and the common-law action were consolidated and tried together; and upon the trial a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs for the amount found to be due them by an auditor to whom the suit upon the notes had been referred. Subsequently the claim case came on for trial, [411]*411and upon such trial the claimant admitted that at the time of the levy of the attachment the defendant was in possession of the property levied upon, and assumed the burden of proof. The jury returned a verdict finding the property subject; whereupon claimant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and she excepted.

One ground of the motion for a new trial was, that the court erred in charging: “Whenever a transaction is between husband and wife, and creditors attack.it, then the law throws the onus,, that is the burden of proof, on the wife when she claims the property purchased or received from her husband, to malee a fair showing of the whole transaction.” There is no special assignment of error pointing out wherein this charge is claimed to be erroneous. The charge is in accordance with what this court, in Richardson v. Subers, 82 Ga. 427 (9 S. E. 172), declared to be the law, and with section 2492 of the Civil Code, wherein it is declared that “when a transaction between husband and wife is attacked for fraud by creditors of either, the onus is on the husband and wife to show that -the transaction was fair.” It is, therefore, clear that there is no merit in this ground of the motion.

2. The court charged the jury, that if the claimant had shown by evidence “that she bought this property from her husband in good faith, free from fraud-, for the purpose of settling a debt which her husband owed her,- and you find she has brought evidence before you that he did owe her at the time the deed is alleged to have been dated, the 8th of March, 1894, a valid, subsisting, outstanding debt, if her husband conveyed property to her in settlement of such debt as that, and upon further consideration that she should assume and pay off a debt he owed Richardson, which was secured by a deed on the land made by her husband, and there was no fraud in the transaction, why then I charge you she would have made out such a case as would entitle her to a verdict finding the issue in her favor, unless the plaintiffs . . have shown you some legal reason why she should not have such a verdict.” This charge is complained of in the motion, the assignments of error thereon being, that it put the burden upon claimant of showing “that the defendant, T. J. Strickland, had no fraudulent intent in making the deed referred to,” and implied “that if the claimant did not show” this, “the property'levied on would be subject;” and [412]*412“because it does not instruct tbe jury if defendant . . in the execution of said deed to her had a fraudulent intent unknown to her, or that she had no ground for reasonable suspicion, the property levied on 'would not be subject.” From the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, it appears that the first assignment of error was intended to be based upon the use by the judge of the expression, “free from fraud,” and the language, “and there was no fraud in the transaction.” We do not think that the language, “if the claimant . . has shown . . that she bought this property from her husband in good faith, free from fraud, for the purpose of settling a debt which her husband owed her,” is fairly susceptible of the construction placed upon it by counsel for plaintiff in error, that is, that the charge put the burden on the claimant of showing that the husband had no fraudulent intent in making the deed. The more natural construction of this language is, that the wife must have bought this property in good faith and have been herself free from fraud in buying it. The other expression, “and there was no fraud in the transaction,” is broad enough to include fraud in the transaction on the part of the husband, unknown to the wife, as well as fraud by both husband and wife; but in view of the other instructions of the court upon the same subject, which followed in unbroken connection with the instruction here excepted to, we feel sure that the jury could not have so understood it. The instructions which immediately followed those here excepted to were such as to make it perfectly clear to the jury that fraud in the transaction on the part of the husband alone, unknown to and unsuspected by the wife, would not be sufficient to invalidate the deed which he made to her. This comment upon the charge also disposes of the second assignment of error.

3. One ground of the motion complains, generally, that the court instructed the jury that, in passing upon the question whether or not there was any fraud in the transaction, the question whether the debt which Mrs. Strickland claimed her husband owed her was barred by the statute of limitations was a circumstance which they might consider. It appeared from the claimant’s own testimony that the debts which she claimed her husband owed her, and in payment of which he conveyed to her the lands in question, had been created by her having loaned him money at various times, without taking any written evidence of the indebtedness thus [413]*413created, and that at the time he made her the deed the whole oí this indebtedness had long been barred by the statute of limitations, some of it having then been in existence for about a quarter of. a century. Certainly the jury could consider this circumstance in passing upon the question of the bona tides of the claimant in this transaction with her husband; as it is well settled, both by the provisions of the Civil Code and numerous decisions oi this court, that, fraud being subtle in its nature, slight circumstances tending to show its existence may be considered in determining whether it was or was not present in a given transaction, Comer v. Allen, 72 Ga. 1 (4).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 322, 131 Ga. 409, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-jones-ga-1907.