McKenzie v. McKenzie

Jenkins, J.

J. H. McKenzie brought suit against Eula E. McKenzie, as executrix of the estate of W. M.,McKenzie, alleging that on or about June 4, 1912, there was a settlement of the affairs of a certain partnership known as the Sims-McKenzie Grain Company, of which the plaintiff’s son, Ealph L. McKenzie, was a partner; that Ealph L. McKenzie had obtained money from the plaintiff to invest in the partnership, and on the date of the settlement owed him the amount sued for; that in the settlement of the affairs of the partnership Ealph L. McKenzie received of E.- S. Sims, another partner, a note for $1,884.11; that Ealph L. McKenzie transferred the note to W. M. McKenzie, deceased, with the understanding that the “amount” thereof should be paid by said W. M. McKenzie to'the plaintiff; that although said note has been paid by said E. S. Sims, W. M. McKenzie has never paid plaintiff anything on the same, though he told plaintiff many times that he would do so, and plaintiff brings this suit to recover this sum from the defendant as executrix of the estate of W. M. McKenzie. TJpon the trial of the ease Ealph L. McKenzie testified as follows: “In the wind up E. S. owed me $1,884.11, and he gave me a *28note for that amount, and I turned it over to J. M. [W. M.] McKenzie—the amount over to him, and he was to give my father a check for it. . . The note was given by Mr. Sims to me and' I indorsed it to W. M., and he turned and gave Mr. Sims a check for $3,000, and that made $4,844, and he took some two or three or four houses on the loan. That wound it up so far as I was concerned. He was to pay my father. It wasn’t to be collected. He had Sim’s note and he had a deed for these three or four houses from Sims. . . In the agreement of June 4, 1912, Mr. McKenzie agreed to give Mr. Sims a $3,000 check. He agreed to take the note that Mr. E. S. Sims had given to me; he agreed to take that note and to pay my father the $1,884. -He made that agreement with me in that contract, he made it with Mr. Sims and myself, that he was to take the note of E. S. Sims indorsed by me, and pay J. H. McKenzie $1,884.” The evidence failed to show that the plaintiff was either a party or a privy to such contract, or that the defendant made any promise to the plaintiff himself to pay this money to him. After the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, the court passed the following order: “The plaintiff having failed to make out a cause of action under the pleadings, and after the evidence of plaintiff was all in, upon oral motion of the defendant to dismiss this case the same is sustained and the case dismissed.” After the case came to this court J. H. McKenzie died, and Kalph L. McKenzie, as administrator of his estate, was made a party in his stead.

As in Austell v. Humphries, 99 Ga. 408 (27 S. E. 736), the action here must be “considered to be one at law based upon an express contract” (Sheppard v. Bridges, 137 Ga. 615, 629, 74 S. E. 245); and, whatever might be the plaintiff rights in a proper equitable proceeding, he can not maintain the present legal remedy by which he seeks to enforce an agreement to which die was not a privy, and which was made between other and different parties. The allegations of the petition, together with the evidence for the plaintiff by Kalph L. McKenzie, bring the case squarely within the ruling made'in Sheppard v. Bridges, supra.

Judgment affirmed.

Wade, C. J., and Luke, J., concur.