131 Ga. 521 | Ga. | 1908
(After stating the facts.)
It is essential to the validity of a deed that the land granted be sufficiently described to enable it to be identified. Any description will suffice which identifies the land with such certainty that the specific parcel intended to be granted can be ascertained, either by the calls of the instrument as applied to the land, or by aid of the descriptive portions of the grant. As was said in Crawford v. Verner, 122 Ga. 814 (50 S. E. 958), “the test as to the sufficiency of the description contained in a deed is whether or not it discloses with sufficient certainty what the intention of the grantor was with respect to the quantity and location of the land therein referred to, so that its identification is practicable.” The same rule for determining the sufficiency of a deed made by an individual applies to a deed made by the sheriff, for the sheriff is but the agent of the defendant in execution, constituted and authorized by the law to convey to the purchaser at.sheriff’s sale the title of the defendant in execution. Where a deed purports to convey a part of a larger territory it must contain something by which the smaller area can be segregated from the larger. Does the deed from the sheriff to Davis measure up to this requirement ? The descriptive clause of the deed is “a tract or lot of land lying in the 216 district G-. M., said county [the deed was executed in Clarke county], containing twenty-five acres, it being a part of the W. H. Ficklin lands, bounded on the west by Sandy Creek Bridg'e Boad, on the north by part of the Ficklin lands, on the east by an unknown street, on the south by lands owned by Loan Association of Henrico county, Ya., Thomas Potts, treasurer; levied on as- the property of the defendant, W. H. Ficklin; pointed out by J. T. Anderson, agent.” The western and eastern boundaries are respectively a road and a street, and are therefore fixed and certain. The southern boundary calls for the land owned by the Loan Association of Henrico County, Ya., Thomas Potts, treasurer. The plaintiff in execution offered in evidence a tax deed from Weir, sheriff, to Thomas Potts, conveying “about twenty-five acres of land, more or less, in Clarke county, Georgia, and in
The conclusion we have reached is in perfect harmony with the cases of Walden v. Walden, 128 Ga. 126 (57 S. E. 323), and Shackelford v. Orris, 129 Ga. 791 (59 S. E. 772). In the latter case the description of the land in the deed was very similar to that in the deed before us. It was “the 15 acres hereby conveyed are bounded as follows: north by lands of T. B. Crouch and Wm. Stucker; south by lands of the party of the first part; east by the Louisville public road; and west by the Louisville plank road (old Southwestern road).” It was held that the description afforded sufficient means of ascertaining and identifying, by competent extrinsic evidence, the land intended to be conveyed, and was not void for uncertainty. •
From the foregoing it will be seen that the evidence did not demand the verdict, and there was no error in granting a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.