103 Ga. 355 | Ga. | 1898
With reference to this state of facts, the court charged the jury as follows: “It is claimed and insisted upon the part of the plaintiff in this case, that the deed from Dollern, Potter & Company to A. J. Wainwright, with the description therein laid; does not embrace, cover, and convey any part or portion of the land in controversy, being a separate and distinct tract of land and not embraced in or covered by the conveyance from Dollern, Potter & Company to the plaintiff J. B. Ó’Q,uin; it being contended upon the part of the defendant, that while that may
Inasmuch, however, as the judgment in the present case is reversed because of the error hereafter indicated, the question as to whether the deed under which the defendant claims can or
In dealing with this charge, with respect to the exception taken thereto, we are not called upon to enumerate the elements, which, in contemplation of law, go to make up and constitute color of title; we are not to determine whether the conveyances relied upon by the defendant were, in law, good as color of title; nor is it necessary to express any opinion whether the defendant’s possession as shown by the evidence was of a character which, if founded upon color of title, would ripen into a prescriptive title. We are to determine solely the question whether or not it is essential to the validity of an alleged title by prescription, based on possession under color of title, that the person claiming such prescription should have taken the instrument relied on a.s evidence of title under such an honest belief only as would be entertained by an ordinarily intelligent man that the paper would give him a good title to the land in question. In other words, shall ordinary intelligence constitute a criterion by which the good faith or bona fides with which the claimant takes such title and enters, may be ascertained? By our statute it is provided that adverse possession of lands, under written evidence of title, for seven years, shall give a good title by prescription; but if such written title be forged or fraudulent and notice thereof be brought home to the claimant before orat the time of the commencement of his possession, no .'prescription can.be based thereon. Civil Code, §3589. The written evidence of title referred to in the statute, more
Judgment is reversed.