79 Ga. 627 | Ga. | 1888
The Georgia Slate Company filed its bill against J. S. Davitte, alleging that it was a corporation engaged in quarrying slate for market in lot of land No. 212, in the 18th district and third section of Polk county, said lot containing forty acres, more or less; that it acquired title to said lot from the Penrhyn Slate Company, which had previously acquired title to the lot from said Davitte, Pope, Thompson and Smith, by joint deed of said parties; that at the time said deed was made, said Davitte owned an undivided four-tenths of the fee in said lot, said Pope owned an undivided third, and Thompson and Smith the remaining interest; that said deed conveyed the whole interest of these parties to the Penrhyn Slate Company. In the habendum clause of said deed these words were inserted: “ Excepting the right to cultivate that part of said lot now being tilled, which is reserved by said J. S. Davitte.” This deed was dated September 25th, 1872.
The bill alleges that this reservation made in the deed to Penrhyn Slate Company is repugnant to the deed and void, and if it is not void, it operates only to the extent of the four-tenths undivided interest in said lot which Davitte owned at the time the deed was made, and that he is only entitled to cultivate his four-tenths undivided interest, and that he is only a tenant in common with the complainants and has no right to take possession of all the cleared land on said lot and to exclude the complainant therefrom. The bill further alleges that the complainant commenced the operating of the slate quarry some time in 1886, and desired an outlet over this lot 212 to the railroad where its slate could be shipped, but that the defendant refused to give the complainant a right of wray over the cleared
The defendant answered said bill, and admitted in his answer that the complainant had commenced working in said quarry, but denied that the complainant or the Penrhyn Slate Company had any right, title or interest in the cleared portion of said lot 212; that while the deed made by himself and others to the Penrhyn Slate Company, and tl 5 deed from the latter to the Georgia Slate Company, did contain a grant to the whole lot of land, both the grantors and grantees in said deed had full notice at the time said deed was made, that said Penrhyn Slate Company had no title to the west half of said lot, and that said deed was in fraud of the defendant’s title to said half of the lot. The defendant alleges that, in 1871 or 1872, he owned the whole of said lot, and that he made a deed to one-third of the uncleared half of said lot, in which is located the quarry, to Thompson and Smith; and shortly thereafter he made another deed to a third of said uncleared land to Pope; and he denies that he ever made a deed to any one to the cleared portion of said lot; that when the deed made by himself, Pope, Thomson and Smith to the Penrhyn Slate Company was written, Pope was the draftsman who drew the deed, and that he made a mistake in this, that instead of reserving to the defendant that portion of said land in which slate had not been found, it being the cleared half of said lot, said Pope drew the deed so as to convey the whole fee simple title thereof to said Penrhyn Slate Com-, pany; that they only intended to convey to said Penrhyn
Upon the hearing of this bill and answer and the affidavits, the chancellor refused the injunction. The complainant excepted and brought the case here for review.
Under the facts as disclosed by this record, we do not think the chancellor erred in refusing to grant the injunction prayed for. While it is true that the deeds of the complainant show a title to all of the land, the defendant sets up that the title to the part he occupies never passed out of him, and that it was a mistake on the part of the draftsman to convey the whole of the lot; that neither he nor the other grantors intended to convey to the complainant the cleared part of the land; that he only sold and they only purchased that part of the lot in which the slate was discovered. The title to the land being in controversy, and the defendant having filed a bill to reform the deeds, we do not think that the chancellor abused his discretion in refusing the injunction until the dispute about the title is settled by the jury, especially as the complainant does not allege that the defendant is insolvent, and the defendant does allege that he is solvent and able to respond to any damages that the complainant may hereafter recover against him.
Judgment affirmed.