(After stating the foregoing facts.) In the third ground of the amended motion, it is insisted that the . court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant. From the facts that we find in the record there is no merit in this contention. The bill of exceptions recites: “At the conclusion of the evidence, the plaintiffs moved the court to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, and the defendant moved the court to direct in favor of the defendant, and both sides agreed that there was no issue of fact for the jury, and that the court should direct a verdict for one side or the other.” In these circumstances neither party can complain that the court erred in directing a verdict, though the losing party may except upon the ground that the verdict directed is erroneous.
Mims
v.
Johnson,
8
Ga. App.
850 (1) (
Amended grounds one and two of the motion for new trial complain as to the admission of certain testimony and the subsequent refusal to permit plaintiffs to file an affidavit of forgery. To count two of the original verified petition, which plaintiffs afterwards struck by amendment, there is attached, and made a part thereof, copy of a deed from Mrs. L.' B. Britt to Larry B. Britt, dated May 12, 1931, recorded December 23, 1931, and conveying to grantee for a valuable consideration her undivided half interest in the land here in controversy; and among the allegations of the stricken count are these:
“13. Your petitioners further show that said defendant claims title through and by virtue of a certain alleged deed, purportedly executed by plaintiffs’ intestate, Mrs. L. B: Britt, on May 12, 1931, to defendant’s testate, L. B. Britt, and conveying the half interest of Mrs. L. B. Britt in the property herein described to L. B. Britt. A copy of said deed is hereto attached, marked Exhibit A.
“14. Petitioners show that the grantor and grantee in said deed . . were husband and wife, and said alleged deed was a contract of sale by a wife of her separate estate to her husband, and the same was invalid and void, because it was not allowed *254 by order of the superior court of Lamar County, the county of her domicile.
“15. Your petitioners, as heirs at law of Mrs. L. B. Britt, hereby tender to the defendant the $5 consideration of said deed. This is a continuous tender, which plaintiffs are ready and able to execute at any time.”
Defendant tendered as evidence the three above-quoted paragraphs of the stricken count, together with the copy deed attached thereto as an exhibit. The court allowed the same in evidence, over an objection then made that the proffered evidence was irrelevant and immaterial because there was no admission in the pleadings that the “alleged” deed was in fact a genuine deed, and that the copy deed is not color of title if the deed was forged or fraudulent. We do not think that the court erred in admitting the testimony over the objection made. Unquestionably this evidence amounted to an admission by plaintiffs that Mrs. Britt, without the approval of the superior court of the county of her domicile, conveyed her undivided half interest in the subject land to her husband for a valuable consideration by a deed which was placed to record in 1931. Until stricken this was a solemn and binding admission in judicio. Code, §§ 38-114, 38-402;
Florida Yellow Pine Co. v. Flint River Naval Stores Co.,
140
Ga.
321 (2) (
After both sides had rested and during the argument of counsel, one of plaintiffs made an affidavit that the deed from Mrs. Britt to her husband, a copy of which had been admitted in evidence, was “to the best of her knowledge and belief” a forgery. No motion, however, was made to rule out the evidence to which the affidavit related, and the court refused to allow plain *255 tiffs to file it. We think that this question may be sufficiently disposed of by saying that, in the absence of any motion to rule out the evidence to which the affidavit related, no error is shown.
In the fourth ground of the amended motion, plaintiffs insist that the court erred in directing a verdict for defendant because the evidence demanded one for them. We shall deal with this ground and the general grounds together. The parties claim title from a common grantor. Plaintiffs made out a prima facie case when they introduced in evidence a deed from M. W. Smith, the common grantor, to their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Larry B. Britt, conveying the premises to them jointly and equally. They insist that the deed from Mrs. Britt to her husband, being one of bargain and sale of her separate estate, passed no title to him. Unquestionably they are correct in this, since under our law (Code, § 53-504) a wife can not make a sale of her land to her husband without an order of approval by the superior court of the county of her domicile, and in the present case there is no evidence of such approval. In fact, the defendant does not contend that there was any. If the record stopped with this, we would unhesitatingly hold that a verdict for plaintiffs was demanded; but such is not the case. Defendant contends that for more than seven years immediately prior to the death of her testator he was in actual, adverse, and exclusive possession of the premises in question under written evidence of his title and under circumstances which ripened his possession into a good prescriptive title. If the record sustains the truth of this contention, then a finding for defendant was required. Under our law adverse possession of land in good faith for a period of seven years, under written evidence of title, gives good title by prescription. Code, § 85-407. Color of title is “written evidence of title” within the meaning of this Code section.
Gooch
v.
Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank,
196
Ga.
322 (
Nor do we think that there is any merit in the contention by plaintiffs that the possession of Mr. Britt subsequently to the death of his wife (the mother of plaintiffs) was that of a cotenant with them; and since the evidence shows no ouster, it necessarily follows, that no prescription ran against them. There is no evidence in the record which would require a finding that Mr.
*257
Britt claimed any interest in the premises as an heir at law of his wife, or that he ever expressly or impliedly recognized the relation of cotenant between himself and their children. As we view the record, his claim for the interest of his wife in the disputed premises was planted squarely upon the proposition that he was her grantee under a deed which was placed to record in 1931; and it has become well settled in this State that possession of land under color and claim of title is adverse possession.
Moody
v.
Fleming,
supra. Mr. Britt’s possession was therefore referable to his deed, and while he could not claim adversely to his wife during her life under the void deed which had been executed to him, when she died his possession became adverse to the world.
Fain
v.
Garthright, Carpenter
v.
Booker,
and
Goss
v.
Brannon,
supra. As authority for the ruling in the
Fain
case, this court cited Bradstreet
v.
Huntington,
The facts in the case at bar, and the law applicable thereto, authorized, if in fact they did not demand, a finding for the defendant, and since the parties by consent agreed to submit the issues involved to the judge for determination, the verdict as directed is not erroneous for any reason assigned.
Judgment on the main bill of exceptions affirmed; cross-bill of exceptions dismissed.
