Fraser v. Dolvin

34 S.E.2d 875, 199 Ga. 638, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 3, 1945
Docket15202.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 34 S.E.2d 875 (Fraser v. Dolvin) 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
Fraser v. Dolvin, 34 S.E.2d 875, 199 Ga. 638, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 410 (Ga. 1945).

Opinion

Duckworth, Justice.

“Possession to be the foundation of a prescription must be in the right of the possessor, and not of another; must not have originated in fraud; must be public, continuous, exclusive, uninterrupted and peaceable, and be accompanied by a claim of right. Code, § 85-402. Color of title is a writing, upon its face professing to pass title, but which does not do it, either from a want of title in the person making it, or from the defective conveyance that is used — a title that is imperfect, but not so obviously so that it would be apparent to one not skilled in the law.” Beverly v. Burke, 9 Ga. 440 (54 Am. D. 351); Street *640 v. Collier, 118 Ca. 470, 472 (45 S. E. 294). Adverse possession of lands, under written evidence of title, for seven years, .shall give a good title by prescription against, everyone, except the State or persons laboring under disabilities; but if such written title is fraudulent, and notice thereof is brought home to the claimant before or at the time of the commencement of his possession, no prescription shall be based thereon. Code, §§ 85-406, 85-407. “Fraud which will prevent possession of property from being the foundation of prescription must be actual or positive fraud, and actual fraud can not be founded on presumptive notice, or that sort of notice which is based on record, or which is presumed froih want of diligence.” Mohr v. Dubberly, 165 Ga. 309 (140 S. E. 856); Graham v. Lanier, 179 Ga. 744, 745 (2) (177 S. E. 574). The fraud contemplated by the law is such as would affect the conscience of the claimant with bad faith and moral turpitude. Brady v. Walters, 55 Ga. 25 (3); Shingler v. Bailey, 135 Ga. 666, 668 (70 S. E. 563); Kelley v. Tucker, 175 Ga. 796 (166 S. E. 187); Graham v. Lanier, supra, “Good faith, as contemplated by the law of prescription under color of title, has relation to the actual existing state of the mind, whether so from ignorance, scepticism, sophistry, delusion or imbecility, and without regard, to what it should be from given legal standards of law or reason.” Lee v. O’Quin, 103 Ga. 355, 365 (30 S. E. 356). Direct evidence of bona ñdes is not required. A presumption of good faith arises from adverse possession. Baxley v. Baxley, 117 Ga. 60 (4) (43 S. E. 436); Canady v. Flanders, 151 Ga. 531, 533 (107 S. E. 533). “If a person buys land in good faith, believing he is obtaining a good title, and enters into possession thereof,- and remains there continuously, uninterruptedly, peaceably, etc. for' seven years, that possession ripens into a good title, whether the title he purchased originally was good or bad. The very object of the doctrine of prescription is to make a bad title good when the necessary requisites have been complied with.” Lee v. Ogden, 83 Ga. 325, 329 (10 S. E. 349). “When an adverse possessor has held for the requisite period and his prescriptive title ripens, it extinguishes all other inconsistent titles and itself becomes the true title.” Powell on Actions for Land, 459, § 349; Danielly v. Lowe, 161 Ga. 279 (3) (130 S. E. 687). “When a party claims adversely, it is hot necessary for him to show that he went into possession *641 bona fide, but the burden of showing fraud is upon the opposite party.” Reynolds v. Smith, 186 Ga. 838, 842 (199 S. E. 137), and citations.

An inchoate prescriptive title may be transferred by a possessor to a successor, so that the successive possessions may be tacked to make out the prescription, except that the innocent purchaser may not tack to his own the possession of a grantor whose possession originated in fraud of the true owner. Code, §§ 85-415, 85-416. Blalock v. Redwine, 191 Ga. 169 (2) (12 S. E. 2d, 639); Cliett v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 195 Ga. 257, 267 (24 S. E. 2d, 59).

It is not claimed by the petitioner that in the foreclosure proceeding in 1930 the bank as trustee was guilty of any fraudulent intent in mistakenly advertising the sale in a newspaper other than the one specified in the power of sale in the security deed, or that the bank itself as purchaser was guilty of any fraud. The sole contention is that the sale and deed executed to the bank were void, and that, as the purchaser under foreclosure of the second security deed, the petitioner is entitled to the property upon payment of any indebtedness due on the original loan and which she tendered into court. The defendant, however, in one ground of his defense stands upon title by adverse possession of himself and his predecessors for more than seven years under color of title bona fide, and, hence, under the law the validity of the deed obtained by the bank is not determinative of the issue here. This contention must be upheld and the question becomes: was there color of title and combined adverse possession for the requisite period without fraud being shown in any of the possessors ?

The bank, as purchaser of the property in 1930, was not cognizant of the mistake in advertising until 1936. That fact is unquestioned. In 1930, upon purchase by the bank, the debtor yielded the possession and died in 1941 without having made any claim to the property or asserting any right of redemption. All the elements of adverse possession by the bank are shown to have been present. The knowledge it acquired in 1936 as to the error in advertising the property in the foreclosure proceeding did not relate back to the time of its entry in 1930, and its bona tides in such entry was unaffected thereby. The property involved was properly described. It is clear, therefore, that it had an inchoate title by prescription which would ripen in seven years of adverse *642 possession. Before the title had ripened, it quitclaimed the same property to DeWitt Nnnn on September 1, 1936, and he immediately went into possession. There was conflicting testimony as to whether or not Nunn was apprised of the error in advertising in the original foreclosure proceeding, but even if he was aware of such irregularity and the defect would render the bank’s deed void as contended by the petitioner, and not merely voidable, which question it is unnecessary here to decide, knowledge of that irregularity would not, under the aitthorities above cited, necessarily militate against him. If in fact he honestly believed, as his uncontroverted testimony shows, that he was acquiring a good title from the bank, and thus entered into possession with all the elements of adverse possession thereafter present- he too had an inchoate title which could ripen into a good title in seven years.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E.2d 875, 199 Ga. 638, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraser-v-dolvin-ga-1945.