162 Ga. 428 | Ga. | 1926
D. C. Pattillo and S. W. Vann brought their petition for injunction and other equitable relief against Acling Moseley, John L. Moseley, and others. The ease was submitted to the court upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. In the petition it is alleged that the plaintiffs are the owners of the lands involved in this controversy, against trespass upon which injunction is sought. The ownership of petitioners is put in issue by the plea and answer filed by the defendants. In the agreed statement of facts it is “agreed that whatever title or interest the said J. L. Moseley had and has under the aforesaid conveyance from C. C. Moseley is now vested in the plaintiffs in this cause.” C. C. Moseley was the father of J. L. Moseley and the common grantor of plaintiffs and defendants. The title which John L. Moseley has to the lands in dispute, and consequently the title which the plaintiffs now have, depends upon the construction of a deed of gift from C. C. Moseley to John L. Moseley. So much of that deed as is material to the questions involved is as follows:
“This indenture made this the 13th day of June, in the year
J. L. Moseley had children living at the time of the execution of the deed, who are still living. The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and the defendants excepted.
In rendering judgment in this case, the court below was of the opinion, as shown by the judgment, that if the fee-simple title to these two tracts of land passed to J. L. Moseley alone, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. And the plaintiffs in error do not take issue with the court as to this proposition, but insist that it
We are of the opinion that the court properly construed the deed. In the'granting clause, as we have seen, the grant is to “J. L. Moseley, his said son, and the heirs of his said son’s body;” and this is followed by the description of the land; and in the tenendum clause is the following language: “To have and to hold the said tracts of land unto him, the said J. L. Moseley, his said son, and to the heirs of his body only, together with all the rights, privileges,” etc:, “to his and their own proper use,” etc. Then follows the clause of the deed which divests the grantee of the estate in case he should die childless,'the divesting clause containing the provision that the property “is to revert back immediately to the estate of” the grantor, C. C. Moseley. This is followed by the stipulation that in no event or contingency is the property conveyed to become subject to any indebtedness of the party of the second part, that is, J. L. Moseley, nor subject to dower; and the deed, except as to the formal parts, concludes with a statement of the intention of the donor, and he thus sets forth in words that intention: “It being the sole intention and desire of the said party of the first part, the said C. C. Moseley, that said described property is deeded for the use, benefit, and behoof and enjoyment of the said party of the second part, the said J. L. Moseley, and the heirs of his body only.” Clearly such a deed conveyed a fee-simple title to J. L. Moseley, defeasible upon the happening of a stated contingency, that is, that the said J. L. Moseley -died childless. And hence we conclude that the court properly construed