143 Ga. 526 | Ga. | 1915
A. M. Marshall brought his suit in ejectment against Nep Carter, tenant in possession. W. L. Stone was served with a notice of the pendency of the suit, and cited to appear and assert any claim which he might have to the land; and in response to the notice he appeared and defended the action. On the trial of the case it was admitted that Stone was the real claimant of the land, and that Carter was in possession as his tenant. The plaintiff Avas nonsuited, and sued out a bill of exceptions, complaining of the nonsuit and of the exclusion of certain muniments of his title, on the ground of the insufficiency of the description of the property.
The real defendant, W. D. Stone, was vouched in by notice, and appeared and defended the action. The plaintiff claims a right of recovery against him and his tenant, both under the deed to secure debt and under the sheriff’s deed. The court rejected both deeds as containing insufficient descriptions of the land purported to be conveyed. With respect to the deed to -secure debt we think the description is ample. It appears that'W. D. Stone purchased two adjoining tracts of land. In conveying the land described in the security deed to Marshall & Company he gave himself as an abutting owner, and the conveyance is to be treated as that of a part of a greater tract. If nothing more appeared in the description of the land than that he was conveying a portion of a larger tract, naming himself as one of the abutters, without locating the dividing line and estimating the area as containing a given number of acres, more or less, the case would fall under the ruling made in Huntress v. Portwood, 116 Ga. 351 (42 S. E. 513). But the description by calls is aided by the further statement: “Said tract of land being land I purchased from Mrs. Odom about five (5) years ago.” This additional description defines the land conveyed as that having been previously purchased, 'about five years