Mrs. Nаncy R. Swain, as administratrix of the estate of W. C. Swain, deceased, brought a complaint against Mrs. Mary H. Frazier, to recover a certain strip of lаnd 100 feet wide in the city of Hazlehurst, alleging, among other things, that the plaintiff and the defendant both claim title to the land under one and the same grantor, thе Southern Pine Company of Georgia, The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and she excepted.
The question presented for decision is not free from difficulty. It is whether a deed purporting to have been signed by a corporation by both its president and its secretary, with the corporate seal affixed, carries prima facie evidence that its execution was by authority of the corporation, when the signature of the secretary alone was properly attested. Hnder the dеcisions of this court it cannot be held that the signature of the president of the corporation was properly attested. The deed purported to have been executed in “Georgia, Chatham County,” whereas the attestation as to the president’s signature was by a commissioner оf deeds for Georgia residing in New York. In Allgood v. State, 87 Ga. 668 (
2. Exception is taken tо the ruling of the court in not submitting to the jury the question whether the defendant had acquired a good title to the premises in controversy by prescription, аnd in confining the issue to be tried to the question of abandonment of the right of way, which is the. land in controversy. When the case of Ga. & Fla. Ry. v. Swain was before this court (145 Ga. 817,
3. The verdict was demanded by the evidence. In addition to that offered by the plaintiff, the defendant introduced as a witness J. J. Frazier, her husband, who testified that he had been in possession of the premises in controversy since the Ocilla & Valdosta
Having reached the conclusion that there was no question of prescription to be submitted to the jury and that the verdict was demanded, the remaining question raised by the record, as to one of the jurors who tried the case being related to one of the parties within the prohibited degrees, becomes immaterial as being harmless error. While such relationship would disqualify the juror, under the facts of the case this will not cause' a reversal.
Judgment affirmed.
