153 Ga. 641 | Ga. | 1922
D. C. Rainey and J. M. Rainey, as executors of the last will and testament of D. L. Rainey, brought an action against Mrs. Charlie Winn for the recovery of a certain tract of land alleged to belong to the plaintiffs as executors, and rents, issues, and profits thereof. The defendant filed her answer in which she averred that the suit was one merely to recover land where there is a disputed boundary line; that in good faith she made upon the land in controversy certain permanent improvements of which the plaintiffs will get the benefit in the event that there be a recovery. The permanent improvements were a house having two rooms of the alleged value of $500, certain wire and rail fencing of the value of $75, and clearing the land of stumps from five acres, of the value of $50. Defendant averred that the mesne profits of the lands involved, excepting for the improvements placed thereon by her, amount to nothing, and that the value of the land for which the plaintiffs sue is $200; and she prayed that in the event of a verdict for the plaintiffs the jury find the value of the land, the value of the permanent improvements, and the amount of the mesne profits, giving to plaintiffs the alternative right to recover the premises subject to the payment to the defendant of the excess of the value of the improvements over the mesne profits within such time as may be fixed by the court, and, in the event plaintiffs fail to do so, the defendant have the right .to pay the value of the land and the mesne profits to the plaintiffs within such time as the court may decree. Defendant also prayed .that the true line between the two lots of land be set up and established by the decree of the court to be the original line, which is averred to be a continuation of a straight line of the dividing line between lots 223 and 234. On the trial of the case the jury returned a verdict “ in favor of the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs pay to the defendant $125 for improvements.” A motion for new trial was made on various grounds, which was overruled, and the defendant excepted.
The grounds of the motion for new trial, except those here dealt with, are without merit. Complaint is made, in grounds 11 and 12 of the motion, of the failure of the court to charge the jury
In the case of Norris v. Richardson, 151 Ga. 31 (3) (105 S. E. 493), it was held: “Where, in an action for land, the defendant is bona fide in possession under adverse claim of title, the mesne profits are to be assessed upon the value of the property as it stood when the defendant’s title accrued, and the plaintiff is prohibited from recovering as mesne profits the increase of income resulting from the improvements made by the defendant in good faith.” It was error, under the evidence, not to charge the above principle. And see Lee v. Humphries, 124 Ga. 539 (52 S. E. 1007).
■Judgment reversed.