Wylly v. Gazan

69 Ga. 506
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 69 Ga. 506 (Wylly v. Gazan) 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
Wylly v. Gazan, 69 Ga. 506 (Ga. 1883).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

The plaintiffs in error, as executors of John M. Cooper, obtained from the court of ordinary of Chatham county an order to sell, as his property, for the purpose of paying the debts, etc., the eastern half of lot No. (8) eight, in Vernon Tything and Heathcote ward, in the city of Savannah, with the improvements and buildings thereon. This order empowered them to employ an auctioneer to conduct the sale, and required them to make return of the same to the court, specifying in their return the property sold, to whom sold, and the terms of the sale.

Acting under this order, and reciting it as their authority, they advertised the property for sale on the first Tuesday of July, 1881. The advertisement described the property as the “ eastern half or three-quarters” of said lot, containing forty-five by ninety feet, “more or less,” and the improvements thereon, as consisting of a residence located on South Broad, between Barnard and Jefferson streets, containing twelve rooms in the main building, and a commodious outbuilding, having six rooms.

When the lot in question was brought to sale, it was bid off by Gazan for the sum of $5,250, who, for reasons which will hereafter appear, refused to take the property at the bid, although the plaintiffs offered him the title and demanded of him the sum bid ; thereupon they advertised the property to be sold at his risk on the first Tues[509]*509day of the following September. At this last sale, it was sold for $4,550.

This suit was brought to recover the difference between the sums bid at the two sales, together with the expense of the last sale, and counsel fees incurred for prosecuting this suit. The defendant pleaded the general issue, “nil debet" and contended that he had been misled by the advertisement as to the quantity of land purchased, and that the advertisement did not conform to the order authorizing the sale, and did not cover the property directed to be sold.

The evidence shows that a full lot in that part of the city had a frontage of sixty feet and ran back ninety feet; that there were more than thirty and less than forty-five feet of frontage; that it was more than a half, and less than three-fourths of the entire lot by about eight and a half feet. There was evidence showing that this extra six and a half feet, running back the entire depth of the lot, was an encroachment upon lot number seven, joining it laterally ; that it had been under enclosure continuously and uninterruptedly for more than forty years, and thus occupied with the eastern half of lot number eight, and was regarded as a part of the latter.

1. In the course of the trial, several witnesses were offered to give their opinion as to whether the words “more or less,” used in the advertisement, would include a deficiency of eight or nine feet in a city lot, and would justify a refusal to comply with a bid made at a sale under such an advertisement. The evidence was objected to, because it was illegal, irrelevant, and “called for an opinion of witnesses upon a question of law, and as to matters about which opinions were inadmissible as evidence the objection was overruled, and the witnesses were permitted to testify.

In any view that can be taken of this testimony, we think this ruling was erroneous. It was one of the issues involved in the trial of the case, and was the conclu[510]*510sion which the jury, under the instructions of the court, had to draw from the facts and circumstances attending the transaction. It could not be admitted as the testimony of experts, as was insisted in argument, for there were no questions of skill, science, trade, or other like questions involved, on which opinions of experts could be taken (Code, 3868) even if the witnesses testifying had been shown to be experts, which, to say the least, is doubtful. Neither do we think that the questions involved, and to be decided by the jury, are questions proper to be illustrated by evidence of opinion and belief. Code, 3867. Thus a witness will not be allowed to express an opinion as to the intention of deceased in approaching the slayer—2 Ga., 173 ; 25 Ib., 210; nor will a subscribing witness to a will be permitted to give an opinion as to the intention of testator—36 Ib., 64, 71; nor is the opinion of witnesses allowed as to the amount of damages sustained by the location of a road through land—47 Ib., 547; 53 Ib., 178. The case of the Central R. R. vs. Kelly, 58 Ga., 107, is fully in point. The plaintiff was not allowed to give evidence of an opinion as to the amount of damage he sustained by crushing his hand in coupling cars; the damage was to be fixed by the jury, according to their opinion, derived from the facts testified to, etc., and what influence the opinions of witness may have had upon them in making their verdict cannot be estimated. Anew trial was granted in this ease on the sole ground that this evidence of opinion as to damages was improperly admitted.

The trial proceeded upon this and other testimony contained in the record, and the jury having found for the defendant, the plaintiff made a motion for a new trial on various grounds, the first nine of which relate solely to this testimony admitted over objection, which has already been disposed of.

2. The court instructed the jury, in relation to the deficiency in the frontage of the lot sold, that the words [511]*511“ more or less,” used in the advertisement, would not cover such deficiency in the quantity of land, provided they found that such deficiency was material,- and provided they further found that the defendant was misled by the advertisement, and being thus misled gave more for the land than he would otherwise have done ; that such a deficiency (if the purchaser was misled by the advertisement and acted because misled) would be such a mistake as in law would amount to a fraud, and would excuse the purchaser from complying; and if such a mistake is shown in this case, they must find for the defendant.

Now this charge, excepted to, is complete in itself, and is of the most general character. The attention of the jury is not called to the circumstances hypothetically stated, leading to and attending the sale and purchase.

The charge assumes that the advertisement, save as to the qualification, implied from the phrase “ more or less” represented the lot in question as containing forty-five feet front. The facts do not authorize the assumption. The advertisement recites the order for the sale, granted by the court of ordinary, which described the property as the east half of the lot in question. ' “ More or less,” as used in the advertisement to describe the quantity of land, should not be disconnected from what immediately precedes it, viz.: that “ one-half or three-fourths” of the eastern part of lot eight was offered for sale ; nor from the description the advertisement gives of the improvements upon the lot; nor from the fact that the entire part of the lot sold was enclosed and occupied by the buildings, and had been so for forty years; that the part so enclosed and occupied actually contained six feet and six inches more than a half lot.

Again, this charge submits it to the jury to infer that the defendant may have been misled solely from the fact that the part of the lot sold was less than three-fourths thereof, and that-being so misled he was defrauded. Leaving out of view all other facts disclosed by the testimony, [512]

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Bluebook (online)
69 Ga. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wylly-v-gazan-ga-1883.