Taylor v. Allen

62 S.E. 291, 131 Ga. 416, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 19, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 291 (Taylor v. Allen) 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
Taylor v. Allen, 62 S.E. 291, 131 Ga. 416, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 93 (Ga. 1908).

Opinion

Lumpkin, J.

Mrs. Nettie McCall Allen made a deed to her brother-in-law, Lee Allen, and on the same day the latter made a warranty deed to the American National Building and Loan Association, which conveyed by quitclaim deed to Taylor. After-wards Mrs. Allen brought ejectment against Taylor, to' recover the land. The defendant vouched Lee Allen as a warrantor. Mrs. Allen recovered judgment. Taylor brought suit against Lee Allen for a breach of warranty. The defendant pleaded that his deed to the association was without consideration; that he was never in possession of the land, and never owned or claimed title to it; that the deed from Mrs. Allen to him and that from him to the association were made to settle a criminal prosecution against Mrs. Allen’s husband on a charge of embezzlement preferred by the association against him; that this mode of conveyance was used at the instance of the association; and that “it was upon this consideration and for this reason alone that a deed was accordingly made by the said Nettie Allen to this defendant and from this defendant to the said association, with full, knowledge of all of the facts herein set out; and this defendant further avers that, in consideration of said aforementioned agreement, the prosecution instituted by the plaintiff against Thos. E. Allen was dropped and was not pressed further by plaintiff or his association, or by any of its officers or stockholders;” and that the deed made by him. was “a part and parcel of an illegal scheme to compound a felony.” Also, that the deed to him and-that by him to the association were for the purpose of effecting a payment by Mrs. Allen of her husband’s debt to the association, and that the dual conveyance was made at the suggestion of the present plaintiff as president of the association.

In the present case the defendant testified, among other things, as follows: Tom Allen was arrested on a charge of embezzlement. “A few days after that my brother’s wife, Mrs. Nettie McCall Allen, sent for me to come to her house. I went to her house and she was crying, and asked me to go down to the Building & Loan Association and offer them this property of hers at Buena Vista. "Well, at her request I went down to the Building & Loan Association. I did not make a statement,of this matter then. I went to Judge Fort in regard to the matter that day; he was the attorney representing the_Building & Loan Association, and as[418]*418sisted the prosecution of my brother by this company. I went to him and offered him this property in settlement of my brother’s— I went to Judge Fort’s office that afternoon, the afternoon of the day my brother’s wife had sent for me, and offered him, as attorney and agent for the Building & Loan Association, a deed from brother’s wife to the association with the understanding that these criminal cases against my brother should be dismissed.”

A ruling on a demurrer to the petition will be found in 121 Ga. 841 (49 S. E. 799).

1-3. It is thus evident that Allen claimed the making of the deed by Mrs. Allen to him and that by him to the association to be parts ®f an illegal scheme. The record in the ejectment case was introduced in evidence. The jury found for the defendant. “Where a defendant may have a remedy over against another, and vouches him into court by giving notice of the pendency of the suit, the judgment rendered therein will be conclusive upon the party vouched, as to the amount and right of the plaintiff to recover.” Civil Code, §5234. It was admitted on the trial that the defendant was vouched in the ejectment case. He was therefore bound by the judgment as to the right of Mrs.- Allen to recover; and if he failed to appear and protect his warranty by defending against her suit, in an action on his warranty he was bound as. to any defense which he could have set up in the first case. If the deed from Mrs. Allen to Lee Allen and from Mm to the association were parts of a scheme to compromise a prosecution for a felony, and this was known to Taylor, as now contended, this would have been a good defense to the action of ejectment, the conveyance and delivery of possession having been consummated. If he failed to set up this, he was bound by the judgment, and precluded from setting up the same issue in a suit on the warranty. If he did appear when vouched and set up this defense, he is of course bound by the judgment. Civil Code, §3742. If the evidence be considered in order to show that the point was actually passed on in the former suit (Irvin v. Spratlin, 127 Ga. 240 (55 S. E. 1037)), it is clear that it was so. The defendant testified that he was a witness in that suit, and gave evidence by interrogatories touching the illegality of the consideration. There was also other evidence on that point. The charge of the court in that case more frequently referred to the deed of Mrs. Allen, [419]*419but it was not confined to her deed alone as distinct and disconnected from that of the defendant.

It seems to be clear, therefore, that not only was the matter of the illegality of the transaction a defense which could have been made in the ejectment suit, but also that it was actually passed upon. The present defendant was accordingly concluded on the subject, and could not again set up that defense. Nor was it any defense against a suit on his warranty that Mrs. Allen made her conveyance to pay the debt of her husband. The restriction on the right of a married woman as to conveying her property, and her right to' recover it if conveyed for the purpose of paying her husband’s debt, and if received and held by one with notice of that fact, is for her protection. Civil Code, §'2488. It is not for the protection of a man sui juris who takes a deed from her and warrants the title to another. The very object of the interposition of this conveyance to him and by him was probably to place a warrantor between her and the company, who could be held on his warranty if she repudiated her conveyance. So a minor may repudiate his contract or conveyance; but if .another warrants or guarantees that the minor’s conveyance shall be good, he is not relieved by the minor’s refusal to abide by it. The very reason for taking the warranty, if lawful, can hardly be a defense to a suit for its breach. A general warranty covers a known defect in the title. Civil Code, §3615; Allen v. Taylor, 121 Ga. 841. The point was raised by objection to evidence and to the charge, arid h.y attacking the verdict as not authorized by the evidence. The objection to the evidence is not well stated, but the assignment of error upon the charge and verdict is valid, and we think should be sustained.

4. The general rule in Georgia is, that, on a breach of warranty of title to land, the measure of damages is the purchase-money, with interest, unless the use of the premises is equal to the interest, in the opinion of the jury. Civil Code, §-3804; Gragg v. Richardson, 25 Ga. 566, 571 (71 Am. D. 190); Wimberly v. Collier, 32 Ga. 13, 20. It has been held by two. Judges (one dissenting) that sven a remote warrantor can show the purchase-money actually paid, in spite of a recital in the deed as to the consideration. Martin v. Gordon, 24 Ga. 533. Speaking for myself, I think the dissent of Judge McDonald, as to an innocent purchaser [420]*420without notice, presents strong reasoning. Taylor could not recover more than he had paid, with interest.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 291, 131 Ga. 416, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-allen-ga-1908.