(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. One of the objections raised to the petition, in the demurrer, was that the contract relied on as the basis of the suit was a contract for the sale of an interest in land or concerning land, and it did not appear from the averments of the petition that the contract was in writing It did not distinctly appear that the contract was verbal. Under such circumstances the objection is not well taken. If the averments of the petition are such as to show a valid contract, even though a contract within the operation of the statute of frauds, and it does not appear that the contract was merely verbal, as against a demurrer the presumption would be that the contract was in writing. Ansley v. Hightower, 120 Ga. 719(3). As to whether the contract relied on should be in writing in order to be enforced, see Roughton v. Rawlings, 88 Ga. 821; Henderson v. Napier, 107 Ga. 345; Lyons v. Bass, 108 Ga. 573.
2. The demurrer also raises the objection that the petition does not allege with distinctness what was' the character of the negotiations pending at the time of the alleged contract between the plaintiff and the defendants, and that it is impossible to determine from the averments of the petition whether the negotiations had reached a stage where the plaintiff had acquired an interest, either legal or. equitable, in the propert3r, which could be made the subject-matter of a sale or transfer. It may be that as against a general demurrer it is possible to infer, from the averments of the petition, that the
Another ground of the special demurrer was that the petition did not allege to whom the first deed was sent, what was the character of the deed, nor what interest it conveyed in the property. This objection was also well taken. The petition should have alleged what interest each of the parties named as grantees therein obtained under the deed, that is, what was the character of the estate conveyed to each. It also should have been distinctly alleged to whom the deedwas forwarded. The allegation is merely that it was “sent to Moultrie, Ga.” Whether it was sent to the defendants, or other persons, does not appear. It is alleged that the defendants caused the deed to be returned and destroyed, and a second deed made; but it is impossible to determine whether the sending of the deed to Moultrie was, under all the circumstances, a delivery of the deed to the plaintiff so as to make it a complete conveyance so far as he was
Judgment reversed.