115 Ga. 662 | Ga. | 1902
Erey, as administrator of Morse, brought complaint for land against Charles Lindley. Upon the trial of the case the plaintiff introduced a deed from Mack Lindley, conveying the' land in dispute to Morse, executed January 23,1890, and recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court November 19,1900. He showed his authority as administrator, proved the value of the premises for rent, and closed. The defendant introduced a deed to the same land, executed in 1876, from A. H. S. McEwen to A. D. McEwen; a deed to the land from A. D. McEwen to Mack, Charles, Moses, Virgil, and James Lindley, dated in 1883, and recorded May 7, 1900 ; also deed from Mack Lindley to defendant, conveying a one-fifth interest in the same land, dated July 28, 1891, and recorded May 7, 1900. The defendant testified that when he purchased and paid for a one-fifth undivided interest from his brother Mack he had no knowledge or notice that the latter had sold the land to any one else. There was no evidence to contradict this statement. The court directed the jury to find for the plaintiff a one-fifth interest in the land in dispute, and mesne profits. A verdict was returned accordingly, and judgment entered thereon. The defendant excepted to the direction of the verdict.
We think the judge erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. In doing so he was evidently controlled by the old law upon the. subject of the registration of deeds. Before the passage of the act of 1889 and the adoption of the present code,the law was that the grantee of a deed should record it within twelve months from its execution. If the deed was not recorded within that time and another deed was made by the same vendor to a different vendee and recorded in time, the younger deed prevailed. But if neither deed
Judgment reversed.