33 S.E.2d 711 | Ga. | 1945
The evidence authorized the verdict. There was no error in overruling the demurrers in the failure to give the instructions complained of, in the excerpts from the charge complained of, in overruling the motion to strike the demise, nor in the exclusion of the evidence excepted to.
2. Exception is taken to the overruling of a ground of demurrer which questions the right of E. S. Jackson to maintain this action as next friend of the various plaintiffs, ten in number, without showing their ages. An amendment was filed adding the word "minor" after the names of the last two plaintiffs. The demurrer, as renewed to the petition as amended, was overruled, and exception was also taken to this order. As amended, the petition alleged a demise from eight named plaintiffs and from two minor *226
plaintiffs, by their next friend, E. S. Jackson. A recovery may be had in ejectment although the lessor of the plaintiff be a minor. O'Byrne v. Feeley,
3. The defendant excepts to an order overruling his motion to strike the demises laid in the names of nine of the ten plaintiffs, the motion alleging that said parties have not given their consent, express or implied, "for his and there names so to be used, and the persons prosecuting this action have no right or authority so to use it." No proof by affidavit or otherwise was offered in support of the motion. The trial judge held that the issue thus made was one of fact and properly determinable on the trial of the case, either by the court or jury. The motion was not renewed or insisted upon at the trial, and the only exception is to the above order. Prima facie, the court will consider that all the demises laid in the declaration are authorized. Powell on Actions for Land, § 37; Shanks v. White,
4. The defendant demurred to the petition as amended, in that it failed to attach a copy of item 7 of the will of J. D. Jackson, reference to which it makes. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendant excepted. The reference to the will as here made was for descriptive purposes only. The Code, § 81-105, provides: "Copies of contracts, obligations to pay, or other writings should be incorporated in or attached to the petition in all cases in which they constitute the cause of action, or the relief prayed for must be based thereon." In the common-law form of ejectment it is not necessary to set out the chain of title under which the plaintiffs claim. Georgia Iron Coal Co. v.Allison,
5. The Code, § 85-1601, provides: "In all cases of disputed lines the following rules shall be respected and followed: Natural landmarks, being less liable to change, and not capable of counterfeit, shall be the most conclusive evidence; ancient or genuine landmarks, such as corner station or marked trees, shall control the course and distances called for by the survey. If the corners are established, and the lines not marked, a straight line, as required by the plat, shall be run, but an established marked line, though crooked, shall not be overruled; courses and distances shall be resorted to in the absence of higher evidence." The bridge over Beaverdam Creek on the Eatonton and Milledgeville Road is a fixed point which is described as the terminus of the disputed line, and unless the location of that bridge has been changed since the execution of the deed and will in 1918, it would be determinative *228 of the boundary line in question, as under the above Code section courses are resorted to only in the absence of higher evidence. Testimony offered by the defendant showed that the road had not been changed appreciably in fifty-four years. The location of the bridge referred to in the various descriptions was an undisputed fact under the record, and the jury was authorized to find the correct line to be the line from the head of the branch to the bridge over Beaverdam Creek on the Eatonton and Milledgeville Road. As a matter of fact, before the jury could have found for the defendant they would have had to find that the disputed line, instead of being a single straight line from and to designated landmarks, as shown in both of the deeds on which the defendant relied, ran from the head of the branch north 22 degrees east to Beaverdam Creek, and thence in a generally westwardly direction along the meanderings of the creek to the bridge over Beaverdam Creek on the Eatonton and Milledgeville Road. Applying the rule of construction laid down in the above Code section (85-1601), so far as the record title was concerned, the verdict for the plaintiff was fully supported by the evidence. Nor can it be said that the defendant's claim of title by prescription was established beyond controversy, so as to demand a verdict in his favor on that theory. On the contrary, it would seem that the verdict as rendered was demanded on the question of descriptive boundary, and the evidence for the defendant might well be taken as wholly failing to establish title by prescription in accordance with the strict rules of law. However, without making any definite ruling upon the question as to whether the verdict for the plaintiff was in fact absolutely demanded, the special grounds of the motion will be dealt with on their merits.
6. The defendant excepted to the failure of the judge to charge, in the absence of a request, the quoted provision of the Code, § 33-101, as follows: "A plaintiff in ejectment must recover on the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of the defendant's title." This academic principle is a rule of evidence. Powell on Actions for Land, § 361, citing Brinkley v.Bell,
(a) The defendant having introduced in evidence a deed from J. D. Jackson to J. K. Jackson, the defendant's father, under whom he claims title, and J. D. Jackson being the testator under whose will the plaintiffs claimed title, it appeared that both the plaintiffs and the defendant, who were coterminous owners, claimed through a common propositus. In Harrison v. Hatcher,
7. Error is assigned because the court charged the rule in cases of disputed land lines, as in processioning cases under the Code, § 85-1601, above quoted. This court recently held inCalhoun v. Babcock Bros. Lumber Co.,
8. One exception is taken to two very lengthy excerpts from the charge relative to title by prescription. The defendant does not contend that this charge set forth any misstatements of law, but complains that it was made applicable only to the defendant, and that it also deprived the defendant of the principle that in ejectment the plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title. Since the plaintiffs claimed only under the descriptive title as set forth in the will under which they held, neither of the objections urged in this ground is meritorious.
9. Exception is made to the charge that title by prescriptive possession must be in good faith and not fraudulent, the contention being that there was no evidence as to fraud. This court can not say as a matter of law that the possession claimed by the defendant was necessarily in good faith, in view of our ruling that under the terms of the deeds, he knew, or ought to have known, that his possession was contrary to his muniments of title. In Cowart v. Young,
10. The defendant excepts to the following excerpt from the charge: "Permissive possession can not be the foundation of a prescription until an adverse claim and actual notice to the other party." It is contended that this charge was unauthorized by the pleadings or the evidence. The testimony of the defendant seeking to set up prescriptive possession was vague and uncertain as to time and location. See Rock Run Iron Co. v. Health,
11. The defendant excepts to the refusal by the court to permit the defendant to answer the following question: "Was it understood that if you could ever pay me that it would be deeded back?" The record does not disclose that the defendant stated to the court what answer was expected, or that his counsel did so for him. No further statement of the evidence is shown in the exception, from which this court may determine what the question refers to. The exception is therefore unintelligible and does not call for any ruling here. Moreover, the defendant or his counsel should have stated to the court what answer was expected, so that its relevancy and admissibility could have been ruled upon by the judge. Abercrombie v. Salisbury,
12. The defendant complains because the court excluded testimony of the attorney for the defendant, relating to the settlement of another lawsuit between the defendant and one A. J. Parham and E. S. Jackson, the next friend of the minor plaintiffs herein, who was the only witness for the plaintiffs. This testimony was: that a deed was agreed to be executed by them conveying the J. K. Jackson property to J. C. Jackson, the defendant here, by a quitclaim or warranty deed of some sort; that this property had been sold at an administrator's sale and A. J. Parham had bought it; that this question had come up at the time this lawsuit was settled in 1935; that there had been some question about the direction of this line, and the witness told the attorney for Parham and E. S. Jackson that he would settle the suit provided they "gave us a deed based on the Georgia Power Company plat." No part of the proceedings in such other suit was offered in evidence, nor the deed agreed to be executed in settlement thereof. From this ground of the motion, it is impossible to tell whether the land here in *232
dispute was there involved. It appears that none of the plaintiffs here were parties thereto. The assignment of error refers to such deed as having been executed. The deed not being in evidence, testimony ancillary thereto is inadmissible. SeeOverby v. Hart,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.