Harris v. McDonald

108 S.E. 448, 152 Ga. 18, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 13, 1921
DocketNo. 2159
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 448 (Harris v. McDonald) 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
Harris v. McDonald, 108 S.E. 448, 152 Ga. 18, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 3 (Ga. 1921).

Opinion

George, J.

This was an action of ejectment. On the conclusion of the evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendant and against the plaintiffs for the premises in dispute. The plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial, which was subsequently amended. To the judgment overruling the motion the plaintiffs excepted. The plaintiffs sought to recover upon the theory that their grandmother, Mrs. Sarah M. Harper, was the owner of the land at the time of her death in 1872,-leaving purchased it from William H. Davis in 1870, and that under the third item of the will of Mrs. Sarah M. Harper a two-thirds interest in the land was devised to her daughter, Lula N. Harper, who after-wards became the mother of the plaintiffs, “for her use during her natural life, and at her death to her children should she leave any, and if she should leave no children or descendants of a child or children then to [testatrix’s] brother, McCormick Neal, should he be in life, or if he is dead then to his children surviving, share and share alike;” that plaintiffs, who were born some years after the death of their said grandmother, took a contingent two-thirds remainder interest in the land, that interest being contingent upon their mother leaving them in life at the time of her death; that their mother afterwards married Henry R. Harris Jr., and in 1887 conveyed the land to defendant’s testator, J. J. McDonald; that the life-tenant, plaintiff’s mother, died in 1917, leaving surviving, her the plaintiffs in this case, who thereupon became seized of a two-thirds interest in the land in fee. To prove their case the plaintiffs introduced: (1) a warranty deed from William H. Davis to Sarah M. Harper, dated January 4, 1870, conveying to her the premises in dispute for a consideration of $6,000; (2) a certified copy of the will of Mrs. Sarah M. Harper, and the probate thereof; (3) a warranty [21]*21deed from Lula Harper Harris, the life-tenant under the will, as to a two-thirds interest in the land, to defendant’s testator, J. J. McDonald, dated January.28, 1887, conveying to him for a consideration of $3500 the premises in dispute; (4) proof of the marriage of Lula Neal Harper to Henry E. Harris Jr., in 1873, and that plaintiffs were the sole surviving children of Lula Harper Harris; and (5) proof of the death of Lula Harper Harris on June 11, 1917, and the filing of this suit on November 13, 1917. The deed from William H. Davis to Sarah M. Harper and the deed from Lula Harper Harris to defendant’s testator, J. J. McDonald, came from the custody of the defendant in-response to a notice to produce, and both deeds were recorded on November 3, 1902. The defendant also introduced a deed from Henry E. Harris Jr., the plaintiff’s duly qualified guardian, to E. H. Thornton, dated December 8, 1888, convejdng to him for a consideration of $255 a one-fourth and a one-twelfth undivided interest in the premises in disprTte. This deed contained the following recital: “ The interests hereby conveyed being the entire interest in said land given to said children by their grandmother, Mrs. Sarah M. Harper.” The- defendant also introduced in evidence a deed from E. H. Thornton to defendant’s testator, J. J. McDonald, dated December 10, 1888, and conveying to J. J. McDonald, for a consideration $1166.66 a one-third undivided interest in the premises in dispute. All deeds appearing in the record and introduced both by plaintiffs and defendant were recordéd on November 3, 1902, in the same deed boob, consecutively paged. To meet the prima facie- case thus made out the defendant undertook to' show: (1) that Eobert G. Harper, a citizen of Newton county and the husband of Sarah M. Harper, was iu possession of the land at the .time of his death in January,. 1868, and that the whole title then passed to his sole heir at law, Lula Neal Harper, afterwards Lula Harper Harris, the mother of the plaintiffs, and that consequently her' deed to J. J. McDonald conveyed the fee, the defendant contending that Mrs. Sarah M. Harper, under whom plaintiffs claimed, never had any title to the land, because, as the widow of Eobert G. Harper, she was not an heir at law, and there was no evidence to show that she had elected to take a child’s part of his estate; (2) that William H. Davis (who conveyed to Mrs. Sarah M. Harper, under whom [22]*22plaintiffs claimed) never had title to nor possession of the land, and that' consequently his deed to Sarah M. Harper did not convey title, and Mrs. Sarah M. Harper, the administratrix of Eobert G-. Harper, could not prescribe under the deed; (3) if Sarah M. Harper ever had any interest in the land, that interest passed upon her death to Lula Neal Harper, her sole heir at law, the defendant contending that the alleged will of Sarah M. Harper had been annulled by her written direction to destroy the same after its execution, and that the alleged probate of the will, based upon an agreement made between Lula Neal Harper, a minor, and McCormick Neal, if binding at all, was binding only between Lula Neal Harper and McCormick Neal, and that the afterborn children of Lula Neal Harper could claim no benefit thereunder by way of estoppel or otherwise, and that the alleged probate was ineffectual because no written application for the probate of said will was made to the court of ordinary; (4) if plaintiffs ever had any interest in the land, the same was divested by the sale of that interest, made by their duly qualified guardian to E. H. Thornton, who afterwards conveyed said interest, if any, to O. J. McDonald, the defendant contending that the interest of plaintiffs, if anjr, was a vested interest, under the will, and could be sold by the guardian, but if said interest w,as a contingent interest it was nevertheless divested by the legal sale made by the guardian, since a sale by-a guardian is not adverse to but for the benefit of the estate represented by him, and if the sale by the guardian was illegal, the plaintiffs were estopped, because' they did not move to set aside the sale within seven years after the youngest of them had attained majority; and (5) the defendant really claimed under Lula Harper Harris as the sole heir at law of Eobert.G. Harper.

William H. Davis, so far as disclosed by the record, never had title to the land. He never had possession of the land. “A deed from one who is apparently a stranger to the paramount title, and who is not shown to have ever been in possession of the premises conveyed, is insufficient to make out a prima facie case showing title in the grantee claiming thereunder.” Bleckley v. White, 98 Ga. 594 (3), 597 (25 S. E. 582); see also Nesmith v. Hand, 128 Ga. 508 (57 S. E. 763). Mrs. Sarah M. Harper could not prescribe under the 'deed, because she was the adminis[23]*23tratrix of the estate, and while acting * as. such could not clainr adversely to the estate. Moreover, she died within less than two years after the execution of the deed. Was the defendant estopped to deny title in William H. Davis? The fact that the defendant produced under notice the deed from William .li. Davis to Sarah M. Harper does not show that the defendant necessarily claimed under the deed. “Where in the trial of an action for the recovery of land the plaintiff relied upon the contention that he and the defendant held under a common grantor, which was denied by the defendant, proof by the plaintiff that the defendant had in his possession a chain of title to the premises in dispute, one link of which was a conveyance from the person claimed by plaintiff to be such common grantor, was not, without more, sufficient to authorize a verdict for plaintiff, as the defendant, for aught that appeared, may have held a valid title from a different source.”

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 448, 152 Ga. 18, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-mcdonald-ga-1921.