137 Ga. 134 | Ga. | 1911
0. T. Montfort, as administrator of M. A. Bentley, filed his petition against Walter M. Gorham et al., praying to enjoin the defendants from interfering with the possession of lot of land number 33 in the 12th district of originally Dooly, now Wilcox county, and to cancel a certain deed as'a cloud upon his title. It was alleged in the petition: that the plaintiff was in possession of the land, and claimed title thereto under a grant from the State to his intestate, dated May 20, 1846; that the title on which the defendants based a pretended claim began with what purported to have been a deed made by M. A. Bentley to Bobert S. Waters, dated July 1, 1854, and they claimed to have mesne conveyances from Waters to themselves; that the deed purporting to have been made by M. A. Bentley to Bobert S. Waters was a forgery; that it was never executed by M. A. Bentley and never did purport to have been executed by him, but on the contrary was originally written as having been executed by M. A. Bentley by a certain other person as his attorney in fact, but if such other person ever wrote the deed, he had no power of attorney to execute it; and that some person claiming under the deed, knowing that no proof could be made of the power of attorney, struck from the deed the words “by his attorney in fact,” and the name signed to the deed as attorney in fact, so as to leave the deed purporting to have been executed by M. A.'Bentley. The defendants filed answers; all of them disclaimed title, except Gorham, who, as surviving partner of Henry Lewis & Company, claimed to have title to the land and to have been in the continuous possession of it for about fifteen years. They denied the plaintiff’s title, and averred him to be a trespasser on the land. The plaintiff filed an affidavit of forgery relative to the deed attacked for forgery in his petition. On the trial the parties stipulated: that the land was originally granted by the State to M. A. Bentley on May 20, 1846; that the plaintiff was in possession at the time of bringing the suit, and that he should proceed by making out a prima facie case, and after that was done, then, upon a tender in evidence by the defendants of the deed purporting to have been made by M. A. Bentley to Bobert S. Waters on July 1, 1854, there should be a separate trial as to the issue of forgery as provided under the law for the trial of forgery as a separate issue. The plaintiff put in evidence his application for administration on the estate of M. A. Bentley, and letters of administration granted
Judgment affirmed.