57 Ga. 134 | Ga. | 1876
This was a claim case, upon the trial of which the jury, under the charge of the court, found the property subject to, the execution levied thereon. A motion was made for a new trial, on the several grounds therein set forth, which was over- ■ ruled by the court, and the claimant excepted.
It appears from the evidence in the record, that the land in controversy was levied on to satisfy a justice’s court fi. fa., issued on a judgment dated 4th of March, 1863, against A. Scott and Samuel Hill, the defendants therein. The levy was made on the land the 2d of November, 1875, as the property of Hill, and claimed by his widow, Nancy Hill. The plaintiff proved that the defendant, Hill, lived on the land several years before the war and up to the time of his death, and was living on it in November, 1865, but died three or four years ago; that the claimant was his wife, and lived on the land with him, and has continued to live on it since his death up to the time of trial; that Hill cultivated the place while he lived on it, cleared some of the land since and before the war, ánd used it in every way as a man would Ids own; that since his death the claimant has lived on the land, cultivated aud
The claimant insists that she has a good prescriptive title to the land under the 2683d section of the Code, and is entitled to be protected against the plaintiff’s judgment lien on it as the property of her late husband, Samuel Hill. To enable the claimant to protect her possession under her deed as a prescriptive title, it was incumbent on her to show that she had been in possession of the land for seven years from the date thereof adversely to the defendant in fi. fa., claiming the possession of the land in her own right, and that her possession was public, continuous, exclusive, uninterrupted, and peaceable, accompanied by a claim of right: Code, sec., 2679. What is the evidence of the defendant’s title to the land ? The evidence is that for several years prior to the plaintiff’s judgment in March, 1873, Hill, the defendant, was in possession of the land; that he continued in possession of it for some years thereafter up to the time of his death, and used it in every way as a man would his own ; that the claimant was his wife, and lived on the land with him. The' deed from Scott to the claimant is dated in February, 1866. Whether Scott’s title to the land, if he had any, was paramount to Hill’s, the defendant in fi. fa., does not appear; there is no evidence that he was ever in possession of it at any time, and whilst the claimant could not deny that Scott had a title to the land, the plaintiff in fi. fa. might do so. There is no evidence in the record that the claimant, at any time after the date of her deed from Scott, claimed the possession of the land under it adversely to the lights of her husband, or that her possession of the land, after the execution of the deed, was in any wise different from what it had theretofore been as the wife of her husband living on the land with him. Hill, the defendant in fi. fa., was in possession of the land, exercising acts of ownership and control over it at the date of claimant’s
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.