Taylor v. Taylor

Citation120 S.E.2d 874,217 Ga. 20
Decision Date13 June 1961
Docket NumberNo. 21219,21219
PartiesMartha Johnson Golden TAYLOR v. James TAYLOR et al.
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia

Syllabus by the Court.

1. A petition sets forth a cause of action when it shows the plaintiffs' right to the relief brought against the defendant.

2. When a party accepts for another an instrument conferring certain rights upon him, he is bound by its terms.

3. Where a party alleges he is entitled to share in the deceased's estate because the latter breached a contract to adopt him, he is not an heir or creditor of the deceased and cannot file caveat objecting to a year's support being set apart out of the deceased's estate.

4. A demurrer that the plaintiffs' right to attack the year's support set aside to the defendant was debarred by laches because the petition alleged that approximately six months had elapsed between entry of the judgment in the year's support proceeding and the filing of the petition, was properly overruled.

5. A demurrer that the petition failed to state 'who are the lawful heirs' of the deceased is not sufficient in form.

6. A demurrer that proper parties are not named in a pleading must point out who are proper parties to the action.

7. A demurrer that points out an omission in a pleading to set forth a particular fact must show why the fact omitted is material to the cause or defense plead.

8. A petition which sets forth a cause of action which reasonable clarity and certainty meets the requirements of good pleading in that respect.

9. A petition that sets forth a cause of action need not anticipate a defense that is not suggested by its allegations.

10. A petition must set forth the date or time of occurrence of every traversable fact material to the cause plead.

James Taylor and Joseph Taylor brought this equitable petition against Mattie Johnson Golden Taylor in the Superior Court of Thomas County, Georgia. The petition as amended set forth the facts we now relate. The defendant is a resident of Thomas County. On April 3, 1960, she filed her petition in the Court of Ordinary of Thomas County, Georgia, alleging that she was the lawful widow of Elijah Taylor, and applying for a year's support out of his estate. At the May term, 1960, the court of ordinary entered an order allowing the return of appraisers setting aside to her a year's support. The property described as that set aside as a year's support consisted of realty and personalty which was minutely described. The petition alleged that the defendant had taken charge, custody, possession, and control of all of the property described in the appraisers' return in said year's support, to the exclusion of petitioners; that they are the sons of Elijah Taylor by virtual adoption by Elijah and Janie Taylor, by reason of the facts alleged in the petition; that, when James Taylor was age 7 and Joseph Taylor was age 5, Elijah Taylor and Janie Taylor, his then wife, took the custody and control of petitioners in Homerville, Georgia, from their natural mother. Petitioners show that their natural mother, Louise King, proposed to give petitioners to Elijah and Janie Taylor to rear as their own children.

Elijah and Janie Taylor agreed to adopt petitioners but only on the condition that legal documents were made giving the custody and control of petitioners to Elijah and Janie Taylor. Petitioners' natural mother, along with Janie Taylor at the request of Elijah Taylor, went to the courthouse in Homerville, Georgia, where papers were drawn and signed by their natural mother relinquishing custody and control of petitioners to Elijah and Janie Taylor for adoption. Petitioners allege that for many years Elijah and Janie Taylor had possession of this document, but that Janie Taylor lost the original of the document and has never been able to find it. From that time down to the time petitioners attained the age of legal majority, they were in the custody and control of Elijah and Janie Taylor, living in their home and being in every way treated as natural sons and claimed by Elijah and Janie Taylor to be their sons and given the name Taylor by Elijah and Janie Taylor, Elijah and Janie Taylor always held them out to be their natural sons, and they advised petitioners on reaching near adulthood that they were adopted sons of Elijah and Janie Taylor.

Petitioners allege that the defendant is not the widow of Elijah Taylor, which fact was known to the defendant at the time of the application for a year's support.

The petition in several forms prays that the contract to adopt the plaintiffs be enforced in equity; that the defendant be enjoined from disposing of the property of the estate, and be required to account for the same.

The defendant interposed to the petition general and special demurrers, which were overruled. The defendant excepted to this ruling.

Gainey & Gainey, Thomasville, for plaintiff in error.

Alexander, Vann & Lilly, Roy M. Lilly, Thomasville, for defendant in error.

QUILLIAN, Justice.

1. The petition alleged a cause of action in that it showed the plaintiffs' right of recovery, (Savannah Bank & Trust Co., v. Wolff, 191 Ga. 111, 112, 11 S.E.2d 766; Lansdell v. Lansdell, 144 Ga. 571(1), 87 S.E. 782; Toler v. Goodin, 200 Ga. 527(3), 37 S.E.2d 609; Copelan v. Monfort, 153 Ga. 558, 113 S.E. 514; Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654, 78 S.E. 30, 44 L.R.A., N.S., 773); and the plaintiffs' right to maintain the action against the defendant (Pierce v. Harrison, 199 Ga. 197, 33 S.E.2d 680), and hence it was not subject to the general attack that it set forth no cause of action.

2. The defendant contends that the petition set forth no cause of action because it failed to show that the deceased, whose property the plaintiffs claimed the right to recover, was a party to the contract entered into with the plaintiffs' mother to adopt them and render them capable of inheriting the property of his estate; that the contract is not set forth with requisite clarity; and that the instrument by the terms of which the mother reinquished her parental rights and agreed that the plaintiff be adopted by the deceased and his wife was not signed by the deceased. The contract referred to was, according to the standard set by this court in Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654, 78 S.E. 30, 44 L.R.A.,N.S., 773, and similar holdings of this court, sufficiently definite. The petition explicitly alleges that the deceased agreed to its terms, and that while he did not sign the instrument executed by the natural mother, his promise to adopt the plaintiffs was made in consideration of the mother's agreement to relinquish parental control and consent to the children's adoption. If there had been any necessity that the deceased, when in life, sign the instrument, when he, as the petition alleges, accepted the paper and retained it in his possession, he assented to its terms as freely as if he had affixed his signature to the same. Brown v. Bowman, 119 Ga. 153, 46 S.E. 410; Robson & Evans v. M. J. Weil & Co., 142 Ga. 429, 83 S.E. 207; Hudson v. State, 14 Ga.App. 490, 81 S.E. 362.

3. The plaintiff in error insists that the petition was subject to general demurrer for the reason that the judgment setting apart to her all the property the plaintiffs seek to recover was obtained by her in proceedings regular upon their face, and that the plaintiffs filed no objections in the ordinary's court to the entry of the judgment. The demurrant overlooks the rule that the plaintiffs are neither heirs nor creditors of the deceased (Burgamy v. Holton, 165 Ga. 384, 392, 141 S.E. 42; Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654(6), 78 S.E. 30); and could not legally interpose a caveat in the ordinary's court. Mathews v. Rountree, 123 Ga. 327, 51 S.E. 423. Hence, the fact that they did not oppose the year's support in that court does not prevent them from seeking to recover the property set apart to the defendant.

4. A demurrer that the plaintiffs' right to attack the year's support set apart to the defendant was debarred by laches, because the petition alleged that approximately six months had elapsed between entry of the judgment in the year's support proceeding and the filing of the petition, was properly overruled. Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654(4), 78 S.E. 30.

5. A demurrer that the petition failed to state 'who are the lawful heirs' of the deceased is not sufficient in form. Mathis v. Fordham, 114 Ga. 364(2), 40 S.E. 324. 6. A special demurrer asserts that the petition named no proper party defendant. The criticism is too indefinite. Dawson v. Equitable Mortgage Co., 109 Ga. 389 (1), 34 S.E. 668. A demurrer that proper parties are not named in a pleading must point out who are proper parties to the action. Parker v. Cochran, 97 Ga. 249(1), 22 S.E. 96.

7. A ground of demurrer is that the petition does not allege that no administration of the deceased's estate was necessary....

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    • Georgia Court of Appeals
    • 26 Marzo 2010
    ...180 S.E.2d 702 (1971) (holding that “[a]ssent to the terms of a contract may be given other than by signatures”); Taylor v. Taylor, 217 Ga. 20, 22-23(2), 120 S.E.2d 874 (1961) (recognizing the validity of an oral agreement, despite the written agreement having been Rushin v. Ussery, 298 Ga.......
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    • 15 Marzo 2019
    ...rescind the Agreement by filing a claim in lieu of arbitration simply because PruittHealth failed to sign it. See Taylorv. Taylor , 217 Ga. 20, 23 (2), 120 S.E.2d 874 (1961) (Where a party accepted a paper and retained it in his possession, "he assented to its terms as freely as if he had a......
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    • 1 Octubre 1962
    ...promisor. Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654, 78 S.E. 30, 44 L.R.A.,N.S., 773; Rahn v. Hamilton, 144 Ga. 644, 87 S.E. 1061; Taylor v. Taylor, 217 Ga. 20, 120 S.E.2d 874; Collins v. Griffin, 93 Ga.App. 282, 285, 91 S.E.2d 369. This is true whether the promise to adopt be valid or invalid, enfor......
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    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • 13 Febrero 1995
    ...custody of appellants pursuant to the custody orders, the absence of any document signed by them is immaterial. Taylor v. Taylor, 217 Ga. 20, 22-23(2), 120 S.E.2d 874 (1961). 3. The trial court's grant of an involuntary dismissal cannot be affirmed on the ground that appellants failed to pr......
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