(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Mrs. Mattie Prosser, the nominal plaintiff, suing in behalf of her minor daughter, was offered as a witness by the plaintiff to prove certain facts in regard to the making of a deed to the land in question by Mrs. E. E. Prosser. The defendant objected to her testimony, on the ground that she was the plaintiff in the case, and because she was interested in the result of the suit, Mrs. E. E. Prosser, the grantor from whom both the plaintiff and the defendant claimed, being dead; and upon the further ground that the offer of this testimony was an attempt to engraft upon an unconditional deed a trust in favor of a third party. The testimony was not inadmissible for any of the reasons assigned. The suit was neither instituted nor defended by the personal representative of a deceased person; nor was the evidence rendered inadmissible by any other provision of the Civil Code (1910), § 5858. Blanchard v. Johnson, 142 Ga. 447 (
2. “A voluntary deed, though duly recorded, and taken without notice of a prior voluntary deed executed by the same grantor and not recorded, does not give to the second grantee a priority over the first.” The preference given by statute is confined to deeds made upon a valuable consideration. Toole v. Toole, 107 Ga. 472 (
3. It was not error in this case to instruct the jury as follows: “I charge you that although you might reach the conclusion that Mrs. E. E. Prosser made to Mattie. Leone Prosser the deed in 1902, if the defendant, in 1907, purchased the land from his mother, for a valuable consideration (this is that he paid money for it, although it might not have been the full value of the land), and if he had no actual notice of the previous deed claimed by the plaintiff to have been made by Mrs. E. E. Prosser in the year 1902, if he had no actual notice of that deed, and was what the law calls an innocent purchaser, he should get a good title to the land.” There is no merit in the criticism of this charge that the court instructed the jury that “the valuable consideration must be paid in money,” movant contending- that the consideration “may be anything of value, and other things than money.” The only reference to consideration in the defendant’s allegations was to “a valuable consideration in cash.”
Judgment affirmed.
