Franke v. Berkner

67 Ga. 264
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 67 Ga. 264 (Franke v. Berkner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franke v. Berkner, 67 Ga. 264 (Ga. 1881).

Opinion

Speer, Justice.

John Berkner, being a married man with a family, including wife and children, and holding an estate in his own right, on the 14th of July, 1855, executed a deed in manner and form as follows:

[265]*265Georgia — Bibb county.
“ This indenture made and entered into this the 14th day of July, 1855, between John Berkner and his wife, Margare! Berkner, and Jacob Russell, witriesseth, that the said John Berkner, for the sum of ten dollars to him in hand paid, and for the natural love and affection which he has for his wife and children of her body by him lawfully begotten, have granted, bargained, sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said Jacob Russell, his heirs and assigns, all of the following property, to-wit; one hundred and thirty-seven acres of land lying on the Forsyth road, about four miles from Macon, adjoining the lands of .Merritt, George Douglass, Henry S. Rogers, T. P. Stubbs, and others, now occupied by John Berkner ; three negroes, Sam, a man about sixty years old, Mourning, a woman sixty years old, Esther, a woman about twenty-six years old ; ten cows and seven calves, two horses, one mule, two feather beds and bedsteads; one barouche; to have and to hold said property and all rights of property to the said Jacob Russell, his heirs and assigns, forever upon the trusts following, to-wit: to the use of said John Berkner and his wife, Margaret Berkner, and the children of her body lawfully begotten by said John Berkner, to the exclusion of his and their children by any other marriage, during the natural-of said John and Marga-
ret, and during the natural life of the survivors ; at and from the death of said John and Margaret this trust to cease, and the property and increase thereof to be equally divided between their children, the issue of their marriage, to the exclusion of all others, and to said children forever; the grandchildren, in case the parents be dead, to take the place of their parents. In witness whereof the said parties have set their hands and seals. John Berkner,
Margaret Berkner, Jacob Russell.
“ Signed, sealed and delivered in presence of Caleb Walden, Sr.,
Thos. P. Stubbs, Notary Public.”

To recover nineteen acres of the premises conveyed under the foregoing deed, the defendants in error, as the children of John and Margaret Berkner, brought their action of ejectment, the last life tenant, John Berkner, having died about two years priorto said suit.

To this action plaintiff in error filed the plea of general issue, also a plea of title by prescription in himself, and third an equitable plea by way of defense, in which he [266]*266alleged, “that plaintiffs claim the premises in dispute under deed heretofore set forth of date of 14th July, 1855, as remaindermen, and defendant alleges the same was made under the following circumstances: That John ■Berkner visited Germany in 1854, and on his return brought with him a niece, with whom he became criminally intimate, which resulted in her pregnancy, and when the same became known to his wife, Margaret, she being of strong mind and sharp tongue, was continually reviling her husband, and by her violént threats and harangues frequently forcing her husband to retire from the house and finally yielding to the importunities of his wife, so that neither the niece or her child should have claim upon his property, he, acting under moral duress, executed the deed under which plaintiffs claim title, which was made to appease the anger of his wife, without any intention of passing an absolute estate. Shortly after the niece was delivered of a child, and she before a magistrate swore the same to John Berkner, which caused a divorce suit between Berkner and wife, and which resulted, by the interposition of friends, in another conveyance of said property to his family by John Berkner, except the nineteen acres sued for, which he reserved to himself absolutely. That several years after this, Berkner sold the nineteen acres to Ward in 1861, and subsequently it was bought by defendant at commissioner’s sale, under a decree in chancery, and he has held the same since under color of title peaceably for more than seven years.’’

On motion of plaintiffs’ counsel, this equitable plea was stricken by the court on demurrer thereto. Under the evidence and charge of the court, the jury found for the plaintiffs the premises in dispute; whereupon the defendant made a motion for a new trial on various grounds as set forth in the record, which was refused by the court, and defendant excepted.

Passing by the other grounds in the motion for new' trial for the present, the main questions upon which plaintiff in error relied before this court were:

[267]*267(1.) That the children suing under the deed of the 14th July, 1855, were “contingent .remaindermen,” and were defeated of their contingent estate by the subsequent conveyance of John Berkner, the grantor, and hence had no right of recovery under the deed of 14th July, 1855.

(2.) That if these children took a vested remainder under said deed, they took as tenants in common with their mother, and the legal title being in their trustee,. Jacob Russell, and he being barred from a recovery by lapse of time, they were likewise barred, and the title set up by prescription by defendant should prevail.

1. The deed executed by John Berkner to Russell, as trustee, conveyed the property to the use of John Berkner ■and his wife, Margaret, and the children of her body lawfully begotten by the said John Berkner, to the exclusion of his other children by any other marriage during the natural life of the said John and Margaret Berkner, and during the natural life of the survivor. At and from the death of said John and said Margaret this trust to cease, and the property and the increase thereof is to be equally divided between their children, the issue of their marriage, to the exclusion of all others, and to said children foréver; grandchildren to take in pbce of a deceased parent.

Under our construction of this deed, the children of John and Margaret Berkner were joint life tenants with their parents, and at the same time took a vested fee simple estate in remainder. Russell, the trustee, only held the legal title to this life estate, and when he sold, could only sell the life estate, and could not divest the title of the children in remainder. At the death of the life tenants, Berkner and wife, by the terms of the deed the trust ceased, and became executed. See City-Council of Augusta vs. Radcliffe, 65 Ga., 469; 4 Rich. (S. C.) Eq., 475 ; 34 Ala., 150.

2. The title of the children in remainder not being divested by the sale of the trustee, the statute of limitations did not commence to run against the children until the death [268]*268of both parents. 34 Ga., 518; 1 Root (Con.), 546; 4 Johns. (N. Y.), 390:

3,4.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ga. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franke-v-berkner-ga-1881.