29 S.E.2d 419 | Ga. | 1944
1. An instrument in the form of a deed, reciting that it is an indenture, and naming a consideration, using the words "sold and conveyed," and containing a covenant of warranty by "the grantor," operated to convey title in praesenti, although it also contained a clause that the grantor "has at the death of said Moses J. Kirkland Sr. [the grantor] sold and conveyed," etc.
2. A deed which purports to convey certain land to two named persons during their natural lives, "then to their heirs and assigns," operates to create a life-estate in the two persons named, and a remainder over to such children as were in being at the time of the vesting of the estate.
(a) The time of the vesting of the estate refers to the vesting of possession at the death of the life-tenants.
3. Where land is held by a life-tenant and taxes are assessed against him and executions are issued in personam, a sale under the levy of such executions passes the life-estate only.
4. A recital in a deed, by way of further description of the premises, making reference to another deed from one who, according to the registry of deeds, had at that time no title that he could convey (there being on record a deed to the same property from him to the grantor in the first-mentioned deed), the first-mentioned deed not referring to such other deed as the source of the grantor's title, is not sufficient to justify a holding that said reference carried notice that the grantees in said last-named deed were clothed with title.
The petition alleges the following: (a) On April 23, 1881, M. J. Kirkland Sr. conveyed the land to M. J. Kirkland Jr., by deed recorded on February 9, 1883. (b) On July 13, 1889, M. J. Kirkland Jr. conveyed to Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland, by deed recorded on February 11, 1942. (c) On May 22, 1891, Mrs. Margie Kirkland conveyed to Moses J. Kirkland Sr., by deed recorded on February 11, 1942. (d) On May 11, 1903, Moses J. Kirkland Sr. executed an instrument, the petition declaring that "this indenture *472 made this the 11th day of May, 1903, between Moses J. Kirkland Sr., of the Country of Coffee and State of Georgia, of the first part and M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, of the County of Coffee and State of Georgia, of the second part, witnesseth: That the said Moses J. Kirkland Sr., in consideration of five hundred dollars in hand paid, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, has at the death of the said Moses J. Kirkland Sr. sold and conveyed to the said M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland during their natural lives, then to their heirs and assigns, the following described real estate: 200 acres, more or less, of lot of land No. 451, in the 6th land district of originally Applying but now Coffee County. Said 200 acres being on the south part of said lot and on the south side of Dry Creek. Said Dry Creek being the line as per plat attached to deed from M. J. Kirkland Sr., dated April 23, 1881. The grantor hereby warrants the title thereof against the claims of all persons." This instrument was recorded on September 30, 1908. It is alleged (in paragraph 8 of the petition) that under the deed referred to in the foregoing instrument as having been made by Kirkland Sr. to Kirkland Jr. on April 23, 1881, Kirkland Jr. entered thereon, built a house and opened up a small farm thereon, moved his family and resided thereon, and made it his home continuously, under said deed, from that time until the date of the deed from M. J. Kirkland Jr. to Margie W. Kirkland on July 13, 1889. In paragraph 10 it is alleged that the life-tenants were admitted into possession, and that they continued to hold possession until the death of the last deceased life-tenant, Margie W. Kirkland, on December 22, 1937. (e) On September 30, 1908, M. J. Kirkland Jr. executed a deed to Margie W. Kirkland, conveying an undivided one-half interest in and to the same land, which was recorded October 1, 1908. (f) Quitclaim deeds, each reciting a consideration of one dollar, from various persons, alleged to be all of the heirs at law of M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, dated February 7, 1942, and recorded February 10, 1942. (g) That the defendants claim under the deed from Moses J. Kirkland Sr., quoted in paragraph (d) of this statement, and under certain conveyances hereinafter mentioned. (h) Certain deeds based on sales under levies of tax executions issued in personam against Margie W. Kirkland for taxes for the years, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1932, and 1933. (i) Deed *473 from Margie W. Kirkland to G. S. Tanner, dated December 29, 1936, recorded December 30, 1936, conveying 150 of the 200 acres first-above described (the remaining 50 acres having been theretofore sold under a tax execution to T. P. Kirkland, who subsequently conveyed to G. S. Tanner), said deed containing the following clause: "same being a part of the lands conveyed by Moses J. Kirkland to Margie W. Kirkland and M. J. Kirkland Jr., said deed being dated May 11, 1903, recorded September 30, 1908, in Deed Book 25, page 45, in office of the clerk of the superior court of Coffee County, Georgia." (j) Deed from G. S. Tanner to A. J. Tanner and Mrs. Eliza J. Smith (now Mrs. Melvin J. Davis). dated January 6, 1938, recorded January 20, 1938.
By amendment, the plaintiff alleged that more than one of the tax deeds above referred to contained as a part of the description the words, "and being the same lands as described in deed from Moses J. Kirkland Sr. to M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, as recorded, in Deed Book 25, page 44, in office of the clerk of the superior court of Coffee County, Georgia;" that a similar recital is in the deed from Margie W. Kirkland to G. S. Tanner, under which the defendants claim, and also in a turpentine lease covering 150 acres of this land, from G. S. Tanner to A. J. Tanner. A second count in the petition sought mesne profits. 1. The first question presented is, whether or not the instrument executed by Moses J. Kirkland Sr. and delivered to M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, dated May 11, 1903, conveyed title; the question being whether it is testamentary in character, so as not to convey in praesenti.
The instrument was in the form of a deed. It calls itself an indenture, recites a consideration, uses the words "sold and conveyed," and contains a covenant of warranty. So much of the instrument as is revealed in the record is set forth in the preceding statement of facts. The argument that it is testamentary in character rests upon the fact that it contains the clause, "has at the death of the said Moses J. Kirkland Sr. sold and conveyed," etc. Similar instruments have been before this court a number of times and have been dealt with in the following cases: Among those holding that deeds somewhat similar are not valid to convey *474
a present estate, see Symmes v. Arnold,
We adjudge that the deed passed title in praesenti.
2. The next question is, what estate, if any, passed to M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, and what, if any, passed to their heirs? The use of the word "then" in the phrase "then to their heirs" limits the estate which M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie *475
W. Kirkland took. The word "then" is construed as meaning inthat event, referring to the duration of their "natural lives;" and thus construed, it passed a joint life-estate to M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, with remainder to their children, since the word "heirs" in a remainder is construed to mean children and their descendants. Code, § 85-505; Singer v.First National Bank Trust Co.,
The writer regrets that in preparing the opinion for the court in Cooper v. Harkness, mention was made of Wilde's case, when he intended to refer to Abel's case, Y. B. 18 Edw. 557, 1324, 1 Tiffany on Real Property (2d ed.), 533, § 149.
The argument advanced is, that since this instrument does not declare that the property shall go to "their heirs," but the phrase is "then to their heirs and assigns," the instant case is outside of the rule supported by the authorities heretofore cited, and that the effect of the inserted word "assigns" merely amounted to a reservation to the grantees for them to determine to whom the remainder should go. Construing the instrument as a whole, we are of the opinion that the inclusion of the words "and assigns" does not change or enlarge the character of the estate that went to M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, nor diminish that which their heirs took in remainder, but that the phrase should be construed as if it read "their heirs and their assigns." Therefore the Code, § 85-504, is applicable; and the deed undertook to convey a remainder interest to the children of M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Margie W. Kirkland, that is, such "children and the descendants of deceased children, by representation, in being at the time of the vesting of the estate;" the time of the vesting of the estate referring to the vesting of possession at the death of the last survivor of the life-tenants. Crawley v. Kendrick,
3. The plaintiff sets out in her petition not only her chain of title, but, averring that the defendants claim under a common source, also what she asserts to be their claim of title. In the latter are certain tax deeds based on sales of parts of the property in dispute by virtue of levies of certain executions for State and county taxes, these executions being issued in personam against *476
Margie W. Kirkland. A sale under such executions so issued against one who was merely a life-tenant can not divest the title of the remainderman. Howell v. Lawson,
4. Since there is an allegation, borne out by the facts set forth in the petition, that the plaintiff and the defendants claim under a common source of title, the issue is to be determined by the comparative strength of those two asserted titles.
At the time G. S. Tanner purchased this land from Margie W. Kirkland, to wit, December 29, 1936, and received a deed from her thereto, the record title to an undivided one-half interest was in her. Although she had theretofore, to wit, on May 22, 1891, conveyed the property to Moses J. Kirkland Sr., that deed was not placed on record until February 11, 1942, within a few days before this suit was filed. Unless there was something to put Tanner on actual notice that title had theretofore passed out of Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland into Moses J. Kirkland Sr., Tanner's title would prevail over that of the plaintiff, who claims as grantee of the remaindermen under a deed into Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland and her husband. Counsel for the plaintiff in error insist that as a matter of law it must be held that Tanner had notice by reason of the fact that in several of the tax deeds, heretofore mentioned, the following clause is found: "And being the same lands conveyed by Moses J. Kirkland to Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland and M. J. Kirkland Jr., dated May 11, 1908, and recorded in Deed Book 25, page 44, and by deed from M. J. Kirkland to Margie W. Kirkland, dated September 30, 1908, and recorded in Deed Book 25, page 45." The deed from Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland to Tanner contained the first portion of what is quoted above, to wit, the definite reference to the deed recorded in Book 25, page 44. The quoted words were the latter part of the descriptive clause in these deeds. It will be noted that in this clause there is no mention of any conveyance out of Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland. On the other hand, one of the conveyances referred to in the tax deeds is a deed into Margie W. Kirkland. Counsel for the defendants rely on several *477
decisions of this court to the effect that the mere registration of a derivative conveyance is no notice that title had passed out of the original grantor. See Citizens Southern Bank v.Farr,
Unless Tanner had actual notice of the existence of the deed from Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland to M. J. Kirkland Sr., the plaintiff in error can not prevail. If he did have such notice, her petition sets forth facts which, if established, would entitle her to prevail. Actual notice may be inferred from circumstances. That which puts a party upon inquiry may be the equivalent of actual notice. In Jordan v. Pollock,
Conceding that Tanner was bound by the recitals in his deed, yet. they do not purport to put him on notice of anything except the description of the property involved. Had he examined the deed itself, it would merely have disclosed that Kirkland Sr., after theretofore parting with the title, as shown by the record, undertook again to convey title to the same land. This information would in no wise have put Tanner on notice that Mrs. Margie Kirkland had theretofore reconveyed the property to Kirkland Sr., nor would it have been sufficient to place upon him the duty as a prudent man to investigate whether there were any outstanding unrecorded deeds from her. Although the court in the case next cited was dealing with constructive notice of a derivative deed, by reason of its registry, the reasoning is pertinent as to whether actual knowledge of the deed from M. J. Kirkland Sr. to M. J. Kirkland Jr. and Mrs. Margie W. Kirkland would charge Tanner with actual notice of the intervening unrecorded conveyances. In Felton v. Pittman,
Therefore it is ruled that as to a one-half undivided interest in the 150 acres, Tanner's title is superior to that of the plaintiff, the grantee of the remaindermen under the deed from Kirkland Sr. to Kirkland Jr. and his wife. The plaintiff as the holder of the interests of the remaindermen would be entitled to recover the 50 acres, which were excepted in the deed from Mrs. Kirkland to Tanner as having theretofore been sold for taxes, since the title of the remaindermen was not divested by the tax sale, as hereinbefore ruled.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Bell, C.J., and Jenkins, P. J., who dissent from division 4 of theopinion, and the corresponding headnote.