Court Opinion

ID: 5621366
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 04:37:09.890022+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:37:12.598491
License: Public Domain

ON MOTION ROE EEHEAEING.
Bell, J.
The motion for a rehearing made in behalf of the defendant in error contains the following statement: “In our case the petition sets out a cause of action based upon the duty of defendants to return the $200 deposited with them by the plaintiff, and the right of the plaintiff to the return of said deposit, giving *766as a reason why the said deposit should be returned that defendants had not found a satisfactory house as the defendants had promised to do. The evidence introduced by the defendants contradicted and differed from the reasons alleged by the plaintiff as to why her money should be returned, but it did not disprove the plaintiff’s cause of action, that is, her right to the return of her money and the duty of the defendants to return it, nor did the defendants’ evidence set forth any other reason why plaintiff should not recover. Instead, it conclusively showed other reasons why the plaintiff should recover; these other reasons — (1) that the contract shown by defendants’ evidence and under which the defendants claimed the plaintiff’s money was paid, was void and unenforceable because it was within the statute of frauds; and (2) because it was a contract for the private sale of land by an administrator of the estate of Squire Jones, without any compliance whatsoever with the requirements in Civil Code, §§ 4022, 4026. The court in its decision has- apparently overlooked the above-mentioned points in the ease and the authorities applicable thereto.” This is the gist and substance of the motion, although the grounds stated are argued and elaborated, and authorities in support of the same are cited.
We will not add to what was said in the original opinion upon the subject of the statute of frauds. The other contention, namely, that the evidence established conclusively and without dispute that the house in question was the property of an estate, and thus could not be sold without a compliance with the law relating to administrator’s sales, was not made in the argument or original brief of counsel for the defendant in error, but is brought to the attention of the court for the first time in the motion for a rehearing. We are therefore inclined to the view that this question was not in the mind of the trial judge and was not actually passed upon by him when he directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff; and yet if for this reason the verdict for the plaintiff was as a matter of law demanded, it would have been the duty of this court to affirm the judgment, regardless of the reasoning of the trial judge or of the failure of the defendant in error to make the point in the brief or argument.
Assuming that a recovery upon this theory would have been permissible under the law and would not have been repugnant to the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff had the burden of establish*767ing the inability of the defendants to make title, and here again there was an issue for the jury. The plaintiff introduced no evidence whatever upon this subject, but it so happened that the evidence of the defendants indicated that the property belonged to an estate, and for the purposes of this discussion we will assume that the receipt for the purchase money was executed by the administrator of such estate, although it might be said that the words following the name of the maker of the receipt were merely descriptio person®. Civil Code (1910), § 3570; Nolin v. Mooty, 29 Ga. App. 97 (113 S. E. 814). Proof that the receipt for the plaintiff's money was executed by an administrator, and that the property intended to be sold was the property of the estate represented by such administrator, would probably be sufficient to establish prima facie that the defendants were unable to convey the title to the property, since the law would prohibit a private sale of such property by the administrator. Whitehurst v. Mason, 140 Ga. 148 (78 S. E. 938). The evidence, however, did not stop at this point, but the defendant Will Terrell testified: “She [the plaintiff] admitted to me that the house was suitable, and I have always been ready and willing to get her the house that she accepted.”
This evidence was perhaps opinionative, but was admitted without objection, and it could not be challenged for the first time upon review as incompetent and insufficient. Bull v. Carpenter, 32 Ga. App. 637, 640 (124 S. E. 381). Th¿ witness did not say that he was “able,” but we think that as a matter of evidence the idea was included in the word “ready.” One of the definitions of this word as given by Webster is, “Prepared for what one is about to do or experience; equipped or supplied with what is needed for some act or event; prepared for immediate movement or action.”
Where no right of creditors is involved and the heirs to an estate are sui juris, they may come together and make good title to a purchaser. Harris v. Seals, 29 Ga. 585; McCook v. Pond, 72 Ga. 150; Johnson v. Hall, 101 Ga. 687, 689 (29 S. E. 37); Williams v. Williams Co., 122 Ga. 178 (4, 5) (50 S. E. 52, 106 Am. St. R. 100); Civil Code (1910), §§ 3929, 3934. So far as appears, this was legally possible in the present case, and, in view of the testimony of Will Terrell to the effect that he was ready and willing to get the house selected by the plaintiff, we are not prepared to hold that the evidence as a.matter of law demanded the finding in *768favor of the plaintiff upon the theory that the defendants had accepted her money for a house which they could not deliver.
The plaintiff sought to withdraw from the proposition for reasons not pertaining to the title, and, obviously, the money paid can not be reclaimed merely because the defendants have not actually tendered a good and sufficient deed or bond for title. Chastain v. Platt, 166 Ga. 307 (3) (143 S. E. 378); Fraser v. Jarrett, 153 Ga. 441 (3) (112 S. E. 487).
What we have said both in this and in the original opinion assumes, without deciding, that the defendant Will Terrell should stand in the same place as the other defendant as regards the matter of liability. If he was acting merely as a broker or agent and delivered the money over to the other defendant, it may be that the plaintiff’s claim against the two defendants would rest upon different principles. See, in this connection, Kenney v. Walden, 28 Ga. App. 810 (113 S. E. 61) ; Wright v. Bower, 29 Ga. App. 687 (116 S. E. 341).

Rehearing denied.

Jenlcins, P. J., and Stephens, J., concur.