59 Ga. 299 | Ga. | 1877
This was an action of ejectment, which turned upon the following facts: Vm. Bond died in 1851, leaving a will devising his lands to two only children of his daughter, who married O’Connor first, the father of the children, and Hap, her present husband, before her father’s death. Mrs. Kaji destroyed the will, and kept the fact concealed from her children and son-in-law, plaintiff’s intestate, who married
On these facts, which were submitted to the court without a jury, the court rendered judgment for the defendant, *on its title, by prescription, and plaintiff excepted. So that the single question made is this: Is the railroad company, being an innocent purchaser without notice, in possession of land more than seven years by itself, and other purchasers equally pure, protected by prescriptive title against the true owner by chain of title, though such owner did not discover the fraud until a short time before he died; or, in other words, is a juescriptive title, acquired by seven years’ pos- • session, in the hands of an innocent purchaser, without notice of the fraud, good against the holder of the legal title, who sues as soon as he discovers the fraud ?
It would look exceedingly awkward, to say the least, to have two decisions on the identical facts embracing parts of the same lot diametrically different; and, whilst the chief justice adheres to the views expressed in his dissenting opinion in 53 Ga., 371, yet he concurs with the other members of the court in the propriety of applying the principle of stare decisis to this case, as it is the same transaction which was passed upon before.
Judgment affirmed.