1. The first ground of the amendment to the motion for a new trial complains that the court erred in admitting in evidence the original petition filed in the superior court of Decatur county by J. P. Williams against C. C. Cliett on December 28, 1898, together with the entries thereon: (1) On the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial. (2) Because it does not purport to be signed by any person, but that a firm name is typewritten as the .signature to the petition. (3) Because the petition is not verified by the plaintiff in the suit, but by a member of the law firm representing the plaintiff. All these objections to the admissibility of the evidence are without merit. The petition was relevant as tending to' show an admission that the parties were claiming the land in controversy under a common grantor, J. W. Bryan. Printup v. Patton, 91 Ga. 422 (18 S. E. 311); St. Paul &c. Ins. Co. v. Brunswick Grocery Co., 113 Ga. 786 (39 S. E. 483). AAThile the typewritten signature of the law firm was attached to the petition, the affidavit verifying the petition was signed by a member of the firm; and we think that is sufficient to identify the signature. 1 Bates, Pl. 163; 31 Cyc. 526 (c); In re Graff, 86 Neb. 535 (125 N. W. 1091); Klein v. Turner, 66 Or. 369 (133 Pac. 625).
2.Exception is taken to the admission in evidence of the plea filed by C. C. Cliett to the petition mentioned in the foregoing division of this opinion. Of course the admissions of Cliett, who is not a party to the instant suit, in an answer to another suit, would be inadmissible; but the admission of this testimony will not require a new trial, as under the evidence the verdict for the plaintiff was demanded.
3. Error is assigned because the court admitted in evidence a deed from Cypress Lumber Company to Albert T. Stearns, conveying the land in controversy, together with all the entries on the deed. The objection urged to the admissibility of the deed, at the time the same was tendered in evidence, was that it was not attested or acknowledged in the manner provided by law, and was improperly admitted to record, and could not be admitted in evidence except upon proof of its execution. The caption of the deed was as follows: “State of Florida, Franklin County, City of Apalachicola,” and it was signed, “Cypress Lumber Co. (Seal), Fred M. Stearns, Vice-President (Seal),” with the impression seal of the Cypress *853Lumber Company attached. It was ’attested by John C. Huge and J. B. Sharit on the 22d day of December, 1888. On the same date Ruge certified that Fred M. Stearns appeared before him and acknowledged the deed, and Ruge signed the same as a notary public and attached his seal; but it is insisted that at the time of the acknowledgment the seal of a notary public was not evidence of the fact that he was a notary, and that there is no certificate of any official showing his appointment. The following entry also appears on the deed, immediately following the original signatures thereto: “In pursuance, continuation, confirmation, and completion of the aforesaid deed of conveyance, we have hereunto set our hands and seals, and the official signature and the proper legal seal of the aforesaid The Cypress Lumber Company, at the City of Boston, in the State of Massachusetts, on this the fourth day of January, A. D. 1889. [Signed] Cypress Lumber Co. (Seal), by Fred C. Mosely (Seal), Secretary & Treasurer.” (Here the impression seal of the Cypress Lumber Co.) Signed, sealed, and delivered in the presence of John Kemp, Chas. E. Ashwope.” Also the following entry: “State of Massachusetts, County of Suffolk.—ss. I, Charles Hall Adams, ’a commissioner of deeds for the State of Georgia, in the State of Massachusetts, residing at Boston, do hereby certify that the foregoing instrument in writing was executed by the above-named Fred C. Mosely, Secretary and Treasurer of the Cypress Lumber Company, and the seal of said corporation attached thereto by him, in my presence, on the fourth day of January, A. D. 1889, in due form of law. Witness my hand and official seal, this the fourth day of January, A. D. 1889. Charles Hall Adams, Commissioner of the State of Georgia.” (Here the official impression seal.) Also this entry: “Georgia, Decatur County. I do hereby certify that Fred M. Stearns, as Yice-President of the Cypress Lumber Company, and individually, who is known to me, comes before me and duly acknowledges his signature tó the foregoing deed, dated the 22d day of December, 1888, as his genuine signature and seal, and delivers said deed before me. This 6th day of May, 1889. C. W. Wimberly, Clerk S. C., Decatur County, Ga.” (Here the official impression seal of this officer.) There was an entry of record on the deed as follows: “Georgia, Decatur County. Clerk’s Office, Superior Court. Recorded in Book EE, pp, 548, 549, 550. May 6, 1889. C. W. Wimberly, Clerk S. C.”
*854The execution of the deed in Florida was not proper, under our law which provides how deeds may be executed outside of the State so as to entitle them to record. But the deed was also executed in Massachusetts as a new deed, and this was done 'as required by our law. Civil Code (1910), § 4203. This was not a reacknowledgment of the execution of the deed. Other officers sighed and sealed and witnessed the deed as required by- the statute. The Cypress Lumber Company alleged that they signed the deed in Massachusetts, and the corporate seal was there attached, and the impression of the seal does appear following the signature. They did not merely confirm the former execution, but executed it in Massachusetts anew. The execution of the deed in Florida was treated as insufficient when it was re-executed. It was attested by two witnesses and acknowledged before a commissioner of deeds for the State of Georgia, as the statute provides. This amounted to a re-execution of the deed. It was afterwards recorded in the clerk’s office of the superior court of the county where the land was located, and its admission in evidence was not error on the ground that it was improperly executed.
4. Error is 'assigned because the court admitted oral testimony as to the contents of certain letters passing between J. W. Bryan and J. P. Williams & Co., and relating to the release of mortgage given by the former to the latter prior to Bryan’s sale of the lot in controversy, which mortgage covered, among other lots, the land in dispute. If it be conceded that there was error in admitting the testimony referred to, this would not work a reversal, as, independently of this evidence, a verdict in favor of the plaintiff was demanded. The plaintiff introduced deeds showing title in himself, beginning with a conveyance from J. W. Bryan, dated December 15, 1885. He also introduced documentary evidence showing that J. P. Williams & Co. were the purchasers át a foreclosure sale under mortgage which included the lot in dispute, and which was given by J. W. Bryan to them under date of December 11, 1886, and received a sheriff’s deed to the property, and that the defendant Dollar was holding under bond for title from J. P. Williams. The deed from J. W. Bryan above mentioned was recorded April 16, 1886. We think, under the evidence, a finding was demanded that the plaintiff and defendants claimed under a common grantor; and there being no other evidence of title in the defendants than that *855stated above, the plaintiff showed superior legal title, requiring a verdict in his favor. This being true, the court did not err in directing a verdict, nor in refusing to grant a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Fish, G. J., absent.
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