Voyles v. Lee

49 S.E.2d 529, 204 Ga. 282, 1948 Ga. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 14, 1948
Docket16321.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 S.E.2d 529 (Voyles v. Lee) 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
Voyles v. Lee, 49 S.E.2d 529, 204 Ga. 282, 1948 Ga. LEXIS 411 (Ga. 1948).

Opinion

1. Under the law of the case as made by the judgment overruling the motion to dismiss the petition, that the allegations as to the contract for virtual adoption and compliance therewith were sufficient to authorize *Page 283 the jury, upon proof of such allegations, to return a verdict in favor of the petitioner, the verdict in his favor was authorized by the evidence.

2. The admission of testimony, over objection, that the money in the family of the defendant's intestate and her deceased husband, with whom it was alleged the contract for virtual adoption was made on behalf of the petitioner, was not error for any reason assigned, since the defendant in his answer pleaded substantially the same facts.

3. Under the law of the case as made by the judgment overruling the motion to dismiss the petition, as not setting forth a cause of action, the charge of the court, in substance that, if the jury believed that proof had been made of the facts alleged in the petition as to the contract for virtual adoption of the petitioner and compliance therewith, they would be authorized to return a verdict in his favor, was not error for any reason assigned.

No. 16321. SEPTEMBER 14, 1948.
John Harold Lee filed in the Superior Court of Clayton County a petition against James H. Voyles, as administrator of the estate of Mrs. Alice Sherman, deceased, alleging in substance the following: The petitioner was born on October 1, 1909. Prior to his birth his mother had been committed to the Georgia State Hospital for the Insane at Milledgeville, Georgia, and she was granted a furlough from the said institution and permitted to return to the home of her mother in Atlanta, Georgia, for the purpose of giving birth to the petitioner. Soon after the birth of the petitioner, she returned to the said hospital and has since remained there on account of being incurably insane. Soon after the petitioner's birth, his father abandoned him and his older brother, Carson Lee, and his sister, Lois Clyde Lee, and thereafter neglected, failed, and refused to support them or to exercise any parental control over them. During the year 1917, when the petitioner was eight years of age, the defendant's intestate entered into a contract with the petitioner and his uncle, William Dunn, and his wife, Mrs. Bessie Dunn, with whom the petitioner resided and who stood in the relationship of loco parents to him. Under the terms of the contract it was agreed that the petitioner was to remove from the home of the Dunns to the home of Mrs. Alice Sherman and her husband, John Sherman, the petitioner's uncle, both of whom desired to have a child in their home, and to reside therein as a member of their household and as their own child *Page 284 the relationship to be that of parents and child in so far as legally possible, and that the petitioner would inherit whatever estate the survivor of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman might leave at death. As a result of the said contract the said Mrs. Bessie Dunn and William Dunn surrendered their custody of the petitioner to the said Mrs. Alice Sherman and John Sherman, and the petitioner, pursuant to the said contract, went to the home of the said Mrs. Alice Sherman and John Sherman, and lived with them in their household, gave them the benefit of his services, accepted the relationship toward them of a child to parents, and performed all the obligations which the said contract imposed upon him. The petitioner, by reason of the performance of the contract by the Dunns and himself, is entitled to a specific performance of the contract on the part of the defendant in his representative capacity. At the time the petitioner went to reside with the said Shermans, neither of them had accumulated any substantial amount of property, but during the time the petitioner resided with them through the joint efforts of them and the petitioner they accumulated valuable real estate and a large amount of money, of which Mrs. Alice Sherman died seized and possessed. John Sherman died intestate on or about the ____ day of ____, and thereafter the petitioner and his wife returned to the home of Mrs. Alice Sherman, who was then in poor mental and physical health, and took care of and provided for her as long as her mental condition permitted. Mrs. Alice Sherman died intestate on May 21, 1942. At the time of her death she was seized and possessed of approximately $10,000 in cash and considerable personal property and real estate particularly described in the petition. She left no husband or natural child surviving her. The prayers were: (a) That the defendant be required to specifically perform the contract by paying to the petitioner the amount of money remaining in his hands for distribution among the heirs at law of Mrs. Alice Sherman, and by delivering to him all personal and real property in his possession after payment of her debts and the necessary expenses of administration thereon. (b) That the court enter a decree for specific performance of the contract, so molded as to carry out and give effect to the contract referred to in the petition. 3. For such other and further relief as the nature of the case may require. 4. For process. *Page 285

The defendant answered, denying that the alleged contract was entered into or performed.

Upon the hearing the defendant made an oral motion to dismiss the petition on the ground that no cause of action was set forth against the defendant. This motion was overruled and no exception was taken.

The evidence upon the trial of the case was in some respects conflicting, but only the following need be stated as necessary to a decision here:

W. H. Dunn testified: "I know John Harold Lee. . . He was born close to the Southern shops in Atlanta . . at his grandmother's and grandfather's home. His mother is in the asylum at Milledgeville now. She has been an inmate of the sanitarium at Milledgeville ever since Harold was born. . . The last reports I had of her she was still living. I saw her at the time she was at home and gave birth to the child. . . I knew his father. His name was Lee. His given name was Warren. I don't know where he is but he is dead and buried. He died when Harold was small. . . When Harold's mother went back to Milledgeville he stayed at his grandmother's until he was big enough to go around to other places. He stayed at my house a good deal after he got big enough. When his grandmother died he was seven years old, I would say, or more; now, I'm not so positive on that because I don't keep these years, but he was a good-size child. After his grandmother's death he lived at my house the biggest portion of the time and at John Sherman's. He came to our house first to live after his grandmother died. My wife was his mother's sister, and Mr. John Sherman was my wife's brother. . . Harold's brother is named Carson and he had a sister. . . They first began living at my house as soon as they got big enough to come and play with the children. . . Mr. and Mrs. Sherman came to my house often. They talked with me about Harold. Mrs. Sherman, or Alice, as we called her, was attached to Harold. I say she seemed attached to him because she would promise him things, and his uncle would, too, and they promised to keep him and take care of him as their child. I heard them do it more than one time. She more especially wanted Harold to live with her. She would say things to entice him and promise him things and get him things to entice *Page 286 him to come. He went and stayed with her, you might say, a good portion of his life, and when he got up to be a big-size child he would run away and come back to our house and play with the children, but they would come in behind him after him. . .

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.E.2d 529, 204 Ga. 282, 1948 Ga. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voyles-v-lee-ga-1948.