116 Ga. 351 | Ga. | 1902
Lead Opinion
This case was here at the March term, 1901, when a judgment of the superior court of Taliaferro county, denying an interlocutory injunction to Portwood and Anderson, who were then the plaintiffs in error, was affirmed. See 113 Ga. 815. The general nature of the case being disclosed by the statement of facts embraced in the opinion then filed, it is unnecessary to here repeat the same. At the August term, 1901, of the court .below, after the plaintiffs’ pleadings had been so amended as to eliminate all issues save those in controversy between themselves and C. W. Huntress, as guardian of Ellen Huntress, the case came on for trial before a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiffs. Huntress, as guardian, made a motion for a new trial, to the overruling of which he excepted. Portwood and Anderson thereupon -filed a cross-bill of exceptions. As the case is absolutely controlled adversely to the defendant below by the rulings announced in the headnotes, we shall discuss only those grounds of his motion for a new trial to which these rulings relate, the other grounds thereof being, for the reason just indicated, wholly immaterial, as are also the questions raised by the cross-bill of exceptions.
1, 2. The defendant offered at the trial certain documentary evidence, consisting of certified transcripts from the records of this court and of the court below, for the purpose of showing that it had been adjudicated that the portion of the land in controversy to which Anderson was setting up title was subject to the execution held by Huntress as guardian; and, in this connection, his counsel offered to prove that this alleged adjudication was also binding upon Portwood because of an agreement on his part to abide by the judgment rendered in the claim case of Anderson. If these documents had been introduced, they would merely have shown, (1) that at the February term, 1899, of the superior court of Taliaferro county, that case had been submitted to the presiding judge upon an- agreed statement of facts; (2) that he rendered a judgment holding the land not subject, basing his decision upon the ground that a deed made by the head of a family and purporting to convey property which had been set apart as a homestead' under the constitution of 1868 did not, if executed while the homestead estate was still in existence, pass to the grantee any interest
On the argument of the case as now presented, counsel for the defendant below relied upon the decision announced by this court in Bradshaw v. Gormerly, 54 Ga. 557. A casual examination of that case will, however, show that it has no hearing on the question under discussion. It there appears that a judgment of the superior court subjecting the property claimed was affirmed by'this court, and thus the claim case was brought to a final termination. The effect of the judgment of affirmance was, therefore, to conclude the claimant not only as to all issues actually made and passed on in the lower court, hut as to all issues which he might have raised therein. To the foregoing ,we may add that the documentary evidence upon which the defendant in this case relied showed that, in point of fact, Anderson’s claim never went to final trial in the court-below, but was voluntarily withdrawn by him; and therefore no adjudication in favor of Huntress, as guardian, has ever been rendered in that court. So far as appears, he assented to the withdrawal of that claim, thus leaving Anderson at liberty to renew it at any time he might choose, and thereby resist, upon any ground other than that as to which he was concluded by the above-mentioned decision of this court, the enforcement of the execution held hy Huntress in his representative capacity. If the latter did not
3. The main and controlling question now before us for determination is whether or not the instrument signed by Absalom G. Evans and his wife in 1882, purporting'to be a deed from them to their son,R. 0. Evans, was, as to description, sufficiently definite and certain to pass title to any portion of the land therein referred to. It appears that one of the makers, Absalom G. Evans, owned a tract of land containing 307^ acres, more or less, which had been set apart as a homestead. A plat of the same, appearing in the record before us, discloses that this tract had many boundaries, and was quite irregular in shape. By the above-mentioned instrument Evans and his wife undertook to convey to their son a portion of this homestead estate, containing 200 acres, more or less. Subsequently the son signed and delivered to Huntress, as guardian, a paper purporting to be a mortgage covering all the interest of the former in the land. The execution issued upon a foreclosure of this paper is that which Huntress, as guardian, is now seeking to enforce. The descriptive words employed in the instrument which he relies on as a deed from Absalom G. Evans and his wife to R. 0. Evans were as follows: “All that tract or parcel of land situated; lying and being in said State and county (Taliaferro), containing two hundred acres, more or less, bounded as follows: on north by land of E. I. Anderson; on east by lands of Daniel Evans, colored ; on south by land of Addison Ogletree; on west land said Absalom G. Evans and Mary E. Evans.” We are of .the opinion that, in view of the facts above stated, this instrument passed nothing to R. 0. Evans. Our reason for so holding is, that it does not identify any particular portion of the entire tract of 307-J acres, more or less, owned by Absalom G. Evans. It is, of course, inferable that he and his wife intended to convey to their son, R. 0. Evans, a parcel of land approximating in quantity 200 acres and constituting a portion of the homestead estate. The difficulty is, that they did not specify any boundary line, or lines, between the land they intended to convey ánd that which they intended to reserve. The words “ on west” certainly.can not be said to indicate a boundary line, or enable any one to locate such a line. It would not do
Even if they and E. O. Evans had agreed upon a dividing line .and understood perfectly how the same should run, this would not .suffice; for a deed must itself contain descriptive words with respect to its subject-matter, such as will enable a third person to apply the same to the locus in quo without resorting to any secret .and undisclosed intention on the part of the parties thereto. Whilst a deed wanting in this essential is susceptible of reformation, so as to effectuate the unexpressed intention of the parties, it can not, without such reformation, stand as a muniment of title. If Absalom G. Evans and his wife actually agreed with E. O. Evans upon a boundary line cutting off from the entire tract the particular portion thereof they desired he should have, the instrument signed by them should itself have disclosed that such was the fact, and also have contained such a reference to this line as would enable third persons to find and locate it. No authority need be cited in support of the proposition that parol evidence is inadmissible to
The present case is easily distinguishable from all of those just-cited ; for, as we have endeavored to point out, the effort in this instance wras to convey a part only of an entire tract of land owned by Absalom G. Evans, without sufficiently designating one of the. essentially important boundaries of that part. So it only remains.
It necessarily follows from what is said above that a verdict for the plaintiffs was demanded by the evidence, and there was no error in denying the defendant a new trial. This being so, we are not, as we have already intimated, called upon to pass on the merits of the questions presented by the cross-bill of exceptions sued out at the instance of Portwood and Anderson, in which complaint.is made of certain interlocutory rulings by the trial judge which were adverse to them.
Judgment on the main bill of exceptions affirmed-, cross-bill of .exceptions dismissed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. 1. “Thedescription of the property conveyed in a deed is sufficiently certain when it shows the intention of the grantor as to what property is conveyed, and makes
(a) The deed conveys all the land from the point where the land, of A touches the land of the grantor to the land of B, and thence-to the land of C. The starting-point is either at the land of A or that of C. • A line drawn from either of these points to the other-point will show the line between the grantor and the grantee on the west.
(b) The fact that the deed calls for 200 acres, more or less, will make no difference. If the boundaries described in the deed take-in the entire 307 acres, the whole will pass to the grantee. Ray v. Pease, 95 Ga. 153, 4 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 763.
(e) Such a deed having'been properly recorded, and a mortgage^ given by the grantee to a third person to secure borrowed money also properly recorded, the sale by the administrator of the grantor of this land conveyed no title to the purchaser, and it was error in the court to refuse to grant a new trial.
2. Where-a levy had been made by virtue of a mortgage fi. fa, and a claim filed, and the claimant in aid of his claim filed an equitable petition setting up his right of subrogation for reasons-alleged in the petition, and on demurrer his equitable right was-stricken, which was the only equity alleged, it was error, over objection of the plaintiff in fi. fa., to try this alleged equitable petition in preference to the claim case, although it was marked filed a day in advance of the claim case. Such a proceeding deprived the plaintiff in fi. fa. of his legal right to the opening and conclusion in the trial of the merits of the claim.