Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Willoughby

19 S.E.2d 810, 66 Ga. App. 900, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 20, 1942
Docket29297.
StatusPublished

This text of 19 S.E.2d 810 (Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Willoughby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Willoughby, 19 S.E.2d 810, 66 Ga. App. 900, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 324 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*901 Stephens, P. J.

Pursuant to notice on August 1, 1939, the Housing Authority of the City of Athens instituted proceedings to condemn a certain tract of land in the City of Athens as the property of Will Willoughby and Adeline Willoughby under authority granted by the General Assembly (Ga. L. 1937, pp. 210 et seq., Ga. L. 1939, pp. 112 et seq.), for slum-clearance purposes and to build low-rent houses. On April 27, 1940, a judgment was rendered in the condemnation procedings that Will Willoughby and Adeline Willoughby recover of the housing authority $1773 as the fair market value of the property. This judgment provided that it “be credited with the sum of . . $1350 . . the sum having been paid into court by the plaintiff as a tender.” Previously, on December 13, 1939, the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company intervened in the condemnation proceedings. The intervenor alleged that at the time the condemnation proceedings were instituted it held a general lien on the property involved against the interest therein of Will Willoughby; that his interest was the entire legal estate; that this lien arose by virtue of a judgment in its favor against Willoughby rendered in the city court of Athens February 21, 1922, for $347.65 principal together with interest, costs, and attorney’s fees; that execution issued on this judgment on February 23, 1922, and was entered on the general execution docket on that date, and that propeT and timely entries of nulla bona were made on the execution. The intervenor prayed that the lien of its judgment be set up and established upon all funds derived from the property involved.

On the same day M. Link and Abe Link, a partnership trading as M. Link & Son, likewise filed their intervention in the condemnation proceedings, and alleged that at the time of the filing of the condemnation proceedings they had a general lien upon the property involved against the interest therein of Will Willoughby, which was the entire legal estate, by virtue of a judgment of a justice of the peace in their favor against him; that this judgment was rendered June 5, 1939, for $43.14 principal and $64.09 interest besides costs; that execution issued on the judgment on June 14, 1939, and was entered on the general execution docket of Clarke County on the same day. The intervenors prayed that the lien of their judgment be set up and established as to the funds derived from the property involved.

*902 Adeline Willoughby filed her response to the intervention of Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company in which she denied that the intervenor held a general lien against the property involved, and alleged that the property involved belonged to her and not to Will Willoughby, because on February 11, 1916, Will Willoughby had transferred to her a bond for title which had been theretofore executed in his favor by Mrs. Kate C. O’Farrell, which transfer was properly recorded and provided as follows: “For value received I hereby transfer, assign, sell and convey all my rights, title, interest, claim or demand in and to the within bond for title, to Adeline Willoughby, and I hereby expressly authorize, direct and instruct A. H. O’Farrell, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, the obligor herein, upon payment to him of the money due under this contract, to make execute and deliver to said Adeline Willoughby the good and sufficient titles with the usual warranty of titles in fee simple herein agreed to be made.” Adeline Willoughby further alleged that she had been in control of this land and had lived thereon together with her mother, uninterruptedly and peaceably from the date of the transfer of such bond fox title to her until the condemnation suit. She further alleged that on September 18, 1923, Howell Cobb filed in Clarke superior court an equitable suit, and alleged that Will Willoughby bought and held under a bond for title certain land which included the land that was condemned in this proceeding; that according to his information and belief Will Willoughby transferred this bond for title to his mother, Adeline Willoughby; that she reconveyed the land to him before her death, and that he, Will Willoughby, owned a valuable equity in such bond on the land therein described. This defendant further alleged in the response that she was, upon her application, made a party to the equitable suit of Howell Cobb, and filed her pleading therein in which she alleged that she “is the oldest child of Will Willoughby and the namesake of her grandmother, and the property in question was given to her by her father when he was entirely solvent and owed little, if any, money;” that there was a dispute between her father and A. H. O’Farrell for the reason that the bond for title called for more land than O’Farrell could deliver; that she alleged in such equitable suit that she had improved the land by building houses thereon, and that she prayed therein that it be decreed that Will Willoughby have “no interest in said land *903 and that no decree shall be rendered against him;” that Will Willoughby filed an answer to the equitable petition in which he alleged that he “purchased a lot on Hancock Avenue from A. H. O’Farrell and took a bond for title therefor, which bond for title he transferred to his daughter, Adeline Willoughby, and the interest, whatever it is, is in her and not in him,” and “the payments made by him were made prior to the time the bond was transferred to Adeline Willoughby,” and “he [referring to O’Farrell] is not due anything because he lost a portion of the land described in the bond for title and what he [Will Willoughby] paid is equal to and exceeds.the land he got.” Adeline Willoughby further alleged in her response that the Yirginia-Carolina Chemical Company intervened in the equitable suit of Howell Cobb upon the basis of the judgment upon which it intervened in this condemnation suit, and alleged therein that Will Willoughby was insolvent and had transferred the bond for title therein referred to to this defendant for the purpose of “hindering, delaying and defrauding said creditors.” This defendant also alleged in her response that M. Link & Son likewise intervened in the equitable suit brought by Howell Cobb against her father, Will Willoughby, as the holder of the bond for title therein referred to, in which suit this defendant intervened and contended that she was the owner of the premises involved because of the transfer of the bond for title to her, and that the same attorney represented both the Yirginia-Carolina Chemical Company and M. Link & Son in such interventions. This defendant further alleged in her response that Howell Cobb was stricken from the equitable suit as a plaintiff and creditor of Will Willoughby, that the equitable case proceeded to trial on the issues made by the answer of Will Willoughby and the intervention of this defendant and on the interventions of the Yirginia-Carolina Chemical Company and M. Link & Son, and that at the conclusion of the evidence a nonsuit was granted and the case dismissed as to M. Link & Son and the Yirginia-Carolina Chemical Company with costs against them, which costs such intervenors have not yet paid. This defendant further alleged in her response that the intervention filed in the condemnation case by M. Link & Son is based on the same claim as that on which their former intervention was based, and the judgment named is but a renewal of the old judgment referred to in that intervention and had become dormant. This defendant *904

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Parker v. Jones
57 Ga. 204 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1876)
Pridgen v. Green
80 Ga. 737 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1888)
Hadaway v. Smedley
46 S.E. 96 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1903)
Oliver v. Holt
80 S.E. 630 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1913)
O'Farrell v. Willoughby
154 S.E. 911 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1930)
Tompkins v. Poff
90 S.E. 630 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.E.2d 810, 66 Ga. App. 900, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-carolina-chemical-co-v-willoughby-gactapp-1942.