122 Ga. 814 | Ga. | 1905
This action was complaint for land, brought by H. C. Yerner against W. H. Crawford. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the premises in dispute. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, on the usual grounds, and also because the court erred in admitting in evidence certain deeds embraced in the plaintiff’s abstract of title. The motion for a new trial was overruled, and the defendant excepted.
Under the testimony submitted pro and con, the jury would have been warranted in reaching the conclusion that both the plaintiff and the defendant held deeds which covered the particular strip of land in controversy, though neither had ever been in actual possession of it nor had his predecessors in title. If such be the truth of the case, then there could be no prescription subsequent to 1855, for the reason that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant nor their predecessors in title had anything more than a constructive possession of the premises in dispute. Where a person having a paper title to land is in actual possession of a part only of the tract, the law construes his possession to extend to the boundaries of the tract; hence adjacent owners may be in constructive possession of the same land, it being included within the boundaries of two different tracts ; in such cases no prescription can arise in favor of either. Civil Code, §3586. Accordingly, if there was no prescriptive title which had ripened since 1855, because of the lapping over of the respective paper titles, the right of the plaintiff to recover would have to depend upon his proving to the satisfaction of the jury that the defendant had estopped himself; by declarations respecting the location of the dividing lines made to John D. Yerner, from asserting any claim to the land sued for. As to this issue the testimony was directly conflicting, and we can not, of course, assume in whose favor the jury decided it. They may not have been able to agree as to what was the real truth of this issue, and may have put their verdict upon the theory .that, whatever may have been the truth as to this matter, the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon a prescriptive title acquired by David Mitchell under the deeds which the court held constituted good color of title. If so, the verdict was contrary to law and the evidence, and was the direct result of the error committed in admitting these deeds in evidence. We are therefore constrained to hold that the error was calculated to
Judgment reversed.