As to whether the petition stated a cause •of action against general demurrer, it is the rule that when a court •of equity has acquired equitable jurisdiction, it will grant complete relief as to all matters to which the parties may be entitled under the pleadings and the proof, even though such relief may include legal rights and remedies.
Kniepkamp
v.
Richards,
192
Ga.
509 (
(a)
“If one having the title to land sells and conveys the same by deed to another, he can not thereafter by his deed convey to a •subsequent purchaser any title thereto. The mere surrender or cancellation of a deed will not divest the title to land which has •once been conveyed and vested by transmutation of possession.”
Sikes
v.
Seckinger,
164
Ga.
96 (3), 109 (
(6) The setting apart of the year’s support to the defendant widow and children from the estate of the father’s grantee did not operate as an adjudication of title to the land in question against the plaintiffs, since they were not parties to that proceeding, and since “a court of ordinary has no jurisdiction to try and determine conflicting claims of ownership . . arising between a widow applying for . . a year’s support and a person asserting title adversely to the estate of her deceased husband.”
Dix
v.
Dix,
132
Ga.
630 (2) (
(c) In suits to recover land, there is no statute of limitations in this State, title by prescription having been substituted for such statutes.
City of Barnesville
v.
Stafford,
161
Ga.
588 (3,
b),
592 (
*692
(d) As to the prayer for recovery of the land, the petition did not disclose a prescriptive title in the defendants, for an additional reason independent of a failure to show actual possession by the defendants. While it is true that, if actual possession had been shown, good faith in the origin of such possession, required by the Code, §§ 85-402, 85-407, would ordinarily be presumed
(Baxley
v.
Baxley,
117
Ga.
60 (4), 62 (
(e) “The doctrine of stale demands,” or laches as codified in § 3-712, “is a purely equitable one,” and “is . . not applicable to a complaint for the recovery of land.” City of Barnesville v. Stafford, 161 Ga. 592 (supra). Accordingly, as to the prayer for a recovery of the land, the petition showed no bar by prescriptive title or lapse of time against any plaintiff.
Under the preceding rulings, it is unnecessary to consider other questions argued, as to statutes of limitation or prescription not running against minors during infancy (Code, §§ 3-801, 85-411); as to prescription not running against one who owns a legal remainder after a life-estate, until the death of the life-tenant
(Mathis
v.
Solomon,
188
Ga.
311, 312,
(/) There is no merit in the ground of demurrer that the administrator of the estate of plaintiffs’ father was not made a party, since whatever title the father had under the first deed, containing the remainder to plaintiffs, expired at his death; and whatever title he might have acquired under the later deed from the same grantor, omitting the remainder, passed by his deed to the brother, under whom the defendants are alleged to claim. The additional ground that “the administrator” is not made a party defendant is too indefinite for consideration, and can not be enlarged by brief of counsel.
(g) All of the defendants, who are alleged to claim a title or *694 interest in the land, being necessary or proper parties for the relief prayed, there was no misjoinder of parties defendant.
Under the foregoing rulings, the amended petition was good against all grounds of demurrer.
Judgment affirmed in No. 13754; reversed in No. 13759.
