28 Ga. 123 | Ga. | 1859
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This was an action of ejectment in the county of Paul-ding for the recovery of a tract of land known as No. 330, in the second district of the third section of originally, Cherokee county. The jury rendered a verdict for the defendant, whereupon the plaintiff moved for a new trial on three grounds. The first ground was, that one of the special jury who tried the cause was related to the defendant, Sanders W. Ragsdale, within the levitical degress of consanguinity, and was, therefore, not a competent juror to try the cause,.which fact was unknown to the plaintiff until said cause had been submitted to the jury, and testimony introduced. This objection comes too late after a trial and verdict. Such objections to jurors may be
The next ground is the important one in the motion, and the point is easily extracted from the request of the court to charge the jury, and the charge of the court as given to the jury, viz : whether a residence upon, and the actual possession and occupation of, one of two tracts of land conveyed to the defendant in the same deed, is such a constructive possession of the other tract, of which there is no actual occupation, as if continued long enough, will bar an action by the rightful owner under the statute of limitations. The court below charged the jury thatit would. The defendant resided on the tract of land adjoining that sued for. He claimed both tracts of land under one and the same deed. He had a hog pen on the land in dispute, and had rails split and logs cut on it, but stated that he was not in possession of it, except that he had paid taxes for it.
By our lottery system, lands are divided into tracts by number and district, and ordinarily, there can be but one grantee or one set of grantees, as when the grant is to orphans, so that a careful and guarded purchaser can find but little difficulty in ascertaining whether he has the rightful title. This consideration alone should lead courts to adhere to the strictest rules of construction in favor of the true owner. We have, in the judgment we pronounce, laid some stress upon this matter, though it was not necessary in order to sustain the case of the plaintiff in error. It is laid down in Adams on Ejectment, 592, that where a large tract of land is divided into lots, the possession of one lot adversely will not create a constructive adverse possession of the other parts of the tract, although claimed by the defendant under the same paper title. The author cites in support of the principle the caseof Johnson ex dem. Ten, Eyck and wife vs. Richards, 6 Cowen, 623.
But again, here are two persons claiming title to the land. One has the actual, rightful, bona fide title; the other has a spurious title. Neither of them has the actual possession. In whom is the constructive possession ? Surely in him who has the rightful bona fide title.
For the reasons here assigned, we think that the court erred in refusing to charge the jury as requested by plaintiff’s counsel, and in giving the charge he did to the jury, and on that ground he ought to have granted a new trial.
Judgment reversed.