7 S.E.2d 231 | Ga. | 1940
1. While the superior court has the power and duty of correcting errors in its records, this rule does not authorize the court to allow filed subsequently to judgment additional pleadings which will materially change the pleadings on which the judgment was rendered. The plaintiff's amended motion for a new trial in the instant case having been heard and overruled, the trial judge did not err in disallowing a second amendment to the motion offered several weeks after the date of the judgment overruling the original motion for the purpose of perfecting the assignments of error contained in the first amendment to the motion for a new trial.
2. Exceptions to the refusal of the court to give in charge certain requested instructions will not be considered where it does not appear who made the requests or that such requests were presented prior to the time the jury retired to make their verdict.
3. In the instant suit for land brought by a holder of an unrecorded deed against one in possession of the land under a subsequent recorded deed, the evidence though conflicting was sufficient to authorize the jury to find that the defendant's deed was for a valuable consideration and was taken without notice of the prior unrecorded deed of the plaintiff. The general grounds of the plaintiff's motion for a new trial are therefore without merit.
1. While the superior court has the power and duty to correct errors and mistakes in the court's records (Code, § 24-104 (6);Beecher v. Carter,
2. The Code, § 81-1101, provides, that in the trial of a case either party or his counsel may make written requests to charge, and although this section provides in the first instance that such requests may be made at any time before the jury retires to consider of their verdict and at another point provides that such requests may be made at any time before the charge begins, and thus is ambiguous as to whether the requests must come before the charge is begun or before the jury retires, it leaves no doubt that in any event such requests must be submitted before the jury retires. For the purposes of this case it is not necessary to decide the ambiguity contained in the section. However, we think that a proper construction of the section as a whole would require a ruling that if the written request is submitted at any time before the jury retires to make their verdict, it meets the requirement of the statute as to time, notwithstanding the ruling made in Investors Syndicate v. Thompson,
The amendment to plaintiff's motion for a new trial consists of five special grounds, each assigning error upon the refusal of written requests to charge. Neither of these grounds shows who made the request and neither shows when the request was submitted. These material deficiencies render each of the grounds of the amendment incomplete, and therefore no assignment of error is made in the amendment to the motion for new trial.
3. Although contradicted in many respects by evidence produced by the plaintiff, the evidence introduced by the defendant is sufficient to support the verdict. The Code, § 29-401, declares that "Every deed conveying lands shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of the county where the land lies. The record may be made at any time, but such deed loses its priority over a subsequent recorded deed from the same vendor, taken without notice of the existence of the first." This court has held that to give priority to a junior recorded deed over a senior unrecorded deed it must appear that the junior deed was for a valuable consideration and taken without notice of the unrecorded deed. Coleman v. MacLean,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur. *675