62 Ga. 718 | Ga. | 1879
The complainants filed their bill in March, 1877, and the cloud which they seek to dissipate or dry up had then waxed to the age of forty-one years and a month. It appeared in February, 1836, and was spread upon record in less than four months. It was already casting its shadow from thence when Nelson, the cloud-maker, selling to George Jones, Jr., in March, 1837, conveyed to him much of what had been previously conveyed to the Georgia Railroad. Generally, the older of two deeds from the same person to different grantees, covering the same premises, is the better. In ordinary legal meteorology, if either is mere vapor while the other is solid, it is the younger and not the elder which is among the clouds. Whether we look to the bill or to the evidence, there is no appearance of fraud in the deed of 1836. The most that can be said is, that Nelson
It is, however, not indispensable that we should propound a theory on which all the three deeds from Nelson can be harmonized. Suppose they cannot be harmonized now after such a lapse of time, what is the consequence ? A party aggrieved, or likely to be aggrieved, by an outstanding deed, may show that it could not, in good conscience, be enforced, and may have it canceled. The very reason
The phraseology of the motion made to dismiss the bill may be criticised, and so perhaps may the time of the motion ; but as neither the bill nor the evidence is good for any decree or judgment whatever on the fine of injunction or cancellation, mere niceties of practice may be passed over. It was proper to dismiss the bill, not for the want of jurisdiction, but for the want of a state of facts which would entitle the complainants to the relief which they sought. There was very ample' jurisdiction, but no occasion for its exercise.
Judgment affirmed.