187 Ga. 389 | Ga. | 1938
Lead Opinion
Stanley and others as trustees brought suit against the Board of Education of Laurens County and others, seeking to enjoin them from removing a schoolhouse from the premises on which it was located, and from cutting timber therefrom. The petitioners claimed title under a deed, the material portions of the description contained therein being as follows: "ten acres, of land which is hereafter to be surveyed, leaving said schoolhouse in the center, . . being parts of two lots of land #93 and #94 adjoining land of John W. Smith and others.” It was alleged that "the property now consists of ten acres of valuable land with a school building thereon, and having a 'large and valuable growth of original virgin pine trees thereon.” The defendants filed demurrers on the grounds that no cause of action was set forth and no title was shown in the petitioners, and that the deed relied on as title was void for vagueness and indefiniteness of description of the property attempted to be conveyed thereby. On interlocutory hearing the demurrers were overruled, and an injunction granted. The defendants excepted.
Where the description in a deed is indefinite, and contains no descriptive terms by the use of which the lands intended to be conveyed can be definitely located and identified, such deed is fatally defective and void. King v. Sears, 91 Ga. 577 (18 S. E. 830); McSwain v. Ricketson, 129 Ga. 176 (58 S. E. 655); Chattahoochee
In view of the above ruling the further action of the trial judge in hearing and passing upon the question of interlocutory injunction was nugatory, and it is not necessary to pass upon the other questions thus presented by the record.
Judgment reversed.
Rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
The decision in Doming v. Stanley, 162 Ga. 211 (133 S. E. 245), does not require a different result in the present case. In that case the statutory school authorities were plaintiffs in error, and did not raise the question in this court as to whether the deed was void for indefiniteness of description, or otherwise attack the description contained in such deed. No decision having been invoked and none having been made in that case, the rulings therein are not authority in the present case as to such question. If the judgment