135 Ga. 595 | Ga. | 1911
' This was a suit wherein the plaintiffs alleged, that a certaiif tract of land belonged to James Hunnicutt, who died in 1854, leaving a widow and eleven children, that the land was- duly assigned to the widow as a dower, that the dowress died in 1899, and that the plaintiffs and defendants are the heirs at law, or purchasers from heirs at law, of James Hunnicutt; and the prayers were, for a recovery of the specific shares ,of the plaintiffs; that a partition of the land be had, and, if it be found impracticable to divide the land in kind, that the same be sold and the proceeds thereof
The court instructed the jury that before the plaintiffs could recover they must either show that there was no administration upon the estate of J ames Hunnicutt, or, if there was administration, that the administrator had assented to the bringing of the suit. The action was substantially one to partition the land of James Hunnicutt among his heirs at law and purchasers from them. The plaintiffs were only seeking to recover in severalty their respective distributive shares in the land possessed by their coheirs. The rule first enunciated in Greenfield v. McIntyre, 112 Ga. 691 (38 S. E. 44), that before heirs at law may recover land which belonged to their intestate they must allege and prove that there was no administration on the estate or that the administrator, if there was one, assented to their bringing suit, has no application to a partition suit between heirs at law. The necessity of such allegation and proof in an action to recover land, brought by heirs of a deceased intestate, was evolved from a'construction of certain code sections, that the primary right to recover land of a deceased intestate vests in the administrator and not in the heirs. It is plain that the construction given to these sections was in relation to suits for land held adversely to the intestate. The language of the Civil Code, § 3081: “If there be a legal representative, the right to recover it [the land] is in him; if there be none, the heirs may sue in their own name,” contemplates a suit against a stranger to the estate. Whether there be administration or not, one heir has no superior right to possession over another. All the heirs are owners of the land of their ancestor, who dies intestate, as tenants in common, subject to be administered by the administrator of their ancestor, and their ¡possession can not be disturbed even by such administrator except in specific instances. Civil Code, § 3358. An heir in possession can
Other charges were excepted to as not being adjusted to the facts in evidence, but as a new trial is to be had, we can not anticipate that the evidence on the next trial will be the same, and for that reason forbear discussion of the merits of these assignments.
Judgment reversed.