An action of complaint for certain land in Colquitt county was brought by Mary A. Benning, as administratrix de bonis non of the estate of Seaborn Jones, against Horkan. The plaintiff put in evidence a grant from the State to Seaborn Jones, of Baldwin county, Georgia, and her letters of administration. Horkan defended, and put in evidence a deed, dated in 1873, from John I. Hall, as administrator of John Hall, to Guzzard; a deed from Guzzard to Henry Banks, dated in 1877; a deed from Henry Banks to James Banks, dated in 1890; and a deed from James Banks to Horkan, dated in 1892. Horkan was shown to be in possession, but there was no evidence as to the length of time he had been in possession. There was evidence that the value of the timber on the land for turpentine purposes had been, before Horkan began to cut it, from $300 to $400; and that it was still worth, for turpentine purposes, from $1.50 to $2.00 per acre. There appears in the record nothing to show the number of acres in the lot. Horkan claimed that the intestate of the plaintiff was not the grantee named in the grant from the State relied upon by the plaintiff, and he showed by uncontradicted evidence that there had been, at the time of the grant, two men of the name of Seaborn Jones residing in Baldwin county, Georgia. He showed that both these men subsequently moved to Muscogee county, where the intestate of the plaintiff resided up to the time of his death. The defendant also offered in evidence an application by the plaintiff to the ordinary of Muscogee county for leave to sell all
Judgment reversed.
