74 Ga. 694 | Ga. | 1885
The complainants, the plaintiffs in error, filed their bill in the superior court of Rabun county against the defendants in error, in which they alleged that, as the only heirs at law of Joseph Fowler, deceased, they were the owners of certain lands in said county; that said W. H. Young, without any authority, took possession of said lands in 1870; that he fraudulently procured one Margaret Fowler to make him a quit-claim deed to this land, he paying her ten dollars for the same, she notifying him that she had no title to the same or claim thereon, in the year 1871; that in 1872, he obtained a deed to said land from one J. L. Shirley, well knowing that he had no claim or title to this land; that these deeds were obtained by Young to defraud plaintiffs; that said Young then formed a fraudulent conspiracy with one Sumter, a near relative, by which
The bill prayed for general relief, and that the land be decreed to plaintiffs, and for an account for mesne profits. To this bill the defendant filed a demurrer. ■
(1.) For want of equity.
(2.) Because the bill did not allege that the defendants, or either of them, resided in Rabun county.
(3.) Because the plaintiffs were barred of any recovery by the statute of prescription..
The court sustained the demurrer on all grounds and dismissed the bill.
To this decree the plaintiffs excepted, and assign error thereon. The plaintiffs, by their counsel, moved the court for a re-hearing of the case, and showed for cause that plaintiffs’ counsel was providentially absent when said case was heard on the demurrer, being sick and unable to attend the court, and that if he had been present, he would have amended the bill, and filed an amendment thereto.
The court refused to grant a re-hearing of said case, and plaintiffs excepted, and also assigned this as error.
It is now too well settled in this state to require argument or demonstration, that if a person takes possession of land which he knows does not belong to himself or any one from whom he purchases, no prescription will run in
If Young procured Sumter to administer on Fowler’s estate for the purpose of divesting the title of the heirs at law, the plaintiffs, and procuring it himself, there being no legal necessity for such an administration, and he thus procured the title himself, then a court of equity would decree the title in Young to be void, and decree the land to the heirs at law ; also mesne profits for the time Young held. Such conduct on Young’s part is fraudulent, and he will not be allowed to reap any benefit or advantage by such fraud.
There is an abundance of equity in the bill, and the court erred in dismissing it for want of equity; nor are the complainants barred of their rights by lapse of time.
We think that the complainants should have averred the residence of Young to be in Rabun county when the bill was filed, but it is conceded by counsel for defendants in error that he does reside in Rabun county, and the bill can be amended in this particular, but it should only have been dismissed on this latter ground alone if not amended.
It is not necessary to notice the other assignment of error, as the case will have to go back, when the bill will be open to such amendments as the complainants may think proper to make.
Judgment reversed.