1. Where a homestead is set apart to the head of a family, under the constitution of 1877, in land belonging to him, he can not make a valid conveyance of the land during the existence of the homestead, and a deed so made is void. However, where the defendant in a suit by an heir of such head of the family for partition of land after the termination of the homestead pleads that such homestead was void because of a prior subsisting homestead, it is error to strike a paragraph of his plea alleging that the defendant holds title to the land by virtue of a deed from the head of the family executed during the alleged existence of such void homestead.
2. A deed from the head of a family on whose application a homestead has been set apart under the constitution of 1877, executed during the existence of the homestead, does not convey title to the grantee, but it is sufficient to constitute color of title for one entering into possession of the land thereunder; and in such a case prescription will run in favor of the grantee against both the homestead and the title estate. Where a deed headed "State of Georgia, ____ County," recites that the grantor is Z. T. Dorsey of Spalding County, Georgia, and describes the land by giving the lot number, the district, and the names of the adjoining landowners on all sides, recites that the described land is "known as Z. T. Dorsey home place," and the deed is recorded in the deed records of Spalding County, Georgia, it is not void for failure of the description to state the county and State in which the land is located. The court erred in refusing to allow the introduction of such deed as color of title.
3. Grounds of a motion for new trial which are vague, indefinite, and uncertain will not be ruled upon by this court. *Page 663
4. Where testimony of a witness is offered in evidence as a whole, it is not error to disallow the same, where a portion of the proffered testimony is inadmissible.
The defendants answered, denying the allegations that Z. T. Dorsey was the owner of the land prior to March 8, 1881, that the described property had been used by the family continuously until the death of Mrs. L. S. Chambers Dorsey in 1939, and that plaintiff and defendants were owners by descent from Z. T. Dorsey of the 85.5 acres of land described in the petition, and for want of information neither admitting nor denying the allegation that at the termination of the homestead it consisted of the described 85.5 *Page 664 acres of land, and admitting the other allegations of the petition. For further plea they alleged that the plaintiff had no title to any part of the land involved, and by paragraph A alleged that on May 16, 1927, Z. T. Dorsey conveyed the land involved to Howard H. Dorsey by warranty deed, a copy of which was attached to the answer as exhibit A. The plea further averred that Howard Dorsey has been in continuous, peaceable, and quiet possession of the property since May, 1927, and has paid the taxes thereon; that Z. T. Dorsey prior to his death divided his entire property among his children, including plaintiff; that Z. T. Dorsey was the son of Nancy Dorsey, the wife of John S. Dorsey; that on the application of Nancy Dorsey, reciting that her husband, John S. Dorsey, refused to make the same, the land here involved was prior to 1881 set aside to herself and children as a homestead; that this homestead remained in full force and effect until the death of Nancy Dorsey in 1883; and that the purported homestead of Z. T. Dorsey in 1881 was null and void.
The plaintiff demurred to defendants' plea and answer on many grounds, all of which were overruled except paragraph 2 thereof, which was sustained and paragraph A of the answer stricken. To this ruling striking paragraph A the defendants excepted pendente lite, and error is assigned thereon in this bill of exceptions. Upon the trial the evidence disclosed that in 1936 Howard H. Dorsey conveyed his interest in the land in dispute to the defendant Charles R. Dorsey, whereupon Howard H. Dorsey was by consent of the parties stricken as a party defendant. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant filed a motion for new trial, which as amended was overruled; and the defendant excepted.
1. If the defendant holds title to the land which the plaintiff seeks to have partitioned, this fact will defeat the plaintiff's action. An answer by the defendant setting up title in himself would constitute a legal defense. The paragraph of the answer stricken on demurrer averred that defendant owned the land, that it was conveyed to him by Z. T. Dorsey on May 16, 1927, by warranty deed, a copy of which was attached as exhibit A. Since both parties claim under Z. T. Dorsey, if this deed is valid on its face the stricken paragraph constituted a valid defense, unless other allegations or admissions in the answer showed the deed to be *Page 665 invalid. The homestead here involved is a constitutional homestead allowed under the constitution of 1877. Under that constitution (art. 9, sec. 3, par. 1, Code, § 2-7401), the owner can not, after the property has been set apart, alienate or encumber such property during the existence of the homestead exemption, and it can be sold only by the debtor and his wife, if any, jointly, with the sanction of the judge of the superior court of the county where the debtor resides or where the land is situated, the proceeds to be reinvested upon the same uses. Under this provision of the constitution any attempt by the owner to alienate or convey the exempted property without the sanction of the judge of the superior court is void.
Some confusion has arisen on this question by reason of the difference in the provisions of the constitution of 1868, which contained no prohibition against such alienation, and the constitution of 1877, which expressly forbids it. In Denson v.Keys,
Under the ruling just made, Z. T. Dorsey was without power to execute the deed attached as exhibit A to paragraph A of the answer, if the homestead alleged to have been set apart to him as head of a family in 1881 was valid and embraced the same land and was effective at the date of the execution of the deed. But some of these questions are necessarily matters of proof and are not settled by the pleadings in this case. It is true the answer admits that a homestead embracing the same property was set apart in 1881, as alleged, and that Mrs. Dorsey, a beneficiary thereunder, did not die until 1939. Had the answer stopped with these admissions the demurrer would have been good and the paragraph properly stricken. But the answer denied that the homestead was a valid one, and alleged that prior thereto the same property had been set apart to Nancy Dorsey and her children as a homestead, and that Nancy Dorsey did not die until 1883, and for these reasons the homestead of 1881 was null and void. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer and striking paragraph A of the defendant's answer.
2. Ground 1 of the amendment to the motion for new trial complains of a ruling disallowing as evidence for defendant the deed attached to the answer as exhibit A. Under the evidence this deed was not admissible as evidence of title, as it was shown that the property described was set apart to the grantor as the head of a family in 1881, and that grantor's wife, a beneficiary, was still in life. The defendant sought to show that the exemption to grantor was invalid because the same property had been set apart to Nancy Dorsey and her minor children in 1869, on her application reciting that her husband, John S. Dorsey, refused to apply for same and that the property belonged to her husband, and Nancy Dorsey, a beneficiary thereunder, died in 1885. But in answer to this evidence the plaintiff showed that John S. Dorsey in 1866 divested himself of all title to the property by deed, and there was no evidence that title had ever again vested in John S. Dorsey, the husband of Nancy Dorsey. None of this evidence constituted an attack upon either of the judgments allowing a homestead. It had to do solely with the question of the title to the land involved, and that is a question which a court of ordinary can not *Page 668
adjudicate. Newton v. Summey,
But the defendant offered the deed for the purpose of proving color of title, and the fact that the grantor was without authority to execute it constituted no ground upon which its rejection could be justified. A writing which upon its face professes to pass title to realty, but which fails to do so because the grantor has no title or because of a defect in the instrument, and which describes the property sought to be conveyed, is sufficient to constitute color of title. Street v.Collier,
The defendant in error urges as a further reason why the deed was properly excluded that it contains no valid description of the property. It is insisted that while the deed is headed "State of Georgia, ____ County," the description of the property therein gives neither the State nor county in which it is located, and that for these reasons the property can not be identified. The description of the land gives the lot number, the district, and the names of the adjoining landowners on all sides. The deed recites that the grantor is Z. T. Dorsey of the County of Spalding and State of Georgia, and at the conclusion of the description of the land is a recital that it is "known as Z. T. Dorsey home place, containing 85 acres more or less." The deed was recorded in the deed records of Spalding County, Georgia. With this description it is not necessary that the State and county be more specifically given. The deed recites that Z. T. Dorsey is a resident of Spalding County, Georgia, and the description states that the land conveyed is known as his home place. Also the names of the various landowners surrounding a tract of 85 acres more or less are given. We think this constitutes an ample key which when aided by parol evidence can fit the description. When the description in a deed furnishes such a key, the deed is admissible in evidence. Swint v.Swint,
A further question for determination in ruling upon this assignment is, could possession under the deed beginning in 1927 ripen into prescriptive title at the end of seven years? As applied to the homestead, this question is very definitely answered in the affirmative. Taylor v. James,
In Davis v. James,
3. Ground 2 of the amended motion for new trial is too vague, indefinite, and uncertain to present an assignment of error upon which a ruling can be made.
4. Ground 3 of the amended motion for new trial excepts to the ruling disallowing witness Howard H. Dorsey to testify in behalf of the defendant to declarations made by Z. T. Dorsey to the effect that he had conveyed the property involved with all of his interest and title therein to the witness in 1927, and that witness owned it completely, and that none of his other sons had any interest in the property, and that this declaration was made on numerous occasions. One of the contentions of defendant made by his answer was that he had held the land in dispute under the deed from Z. T. Dorsey, dated May 16, 1927, as color of title, for more than seven years and had thus acquired title by prescription. *Page 671
That portion of the declaration of the deceased disclaiming title to the property was admissible in evidence as a declaration against his interest, under the Code, § 38-309. See Hughes v.Hughes,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.