Harrison v. Hester

129 S.E. 528, 160 Ga. 865, 1925 Ga. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 16, 1925
DocketNo. 4482
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 528 (Harrison v. Hester) 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
Harrison v. Hester, 129 S.E. 528, 160 Ga. 865, 1925 Ga. LEXIS 283 (Ga. 1925).

Opinion

Russell, 0. J.

Zenobia Hester brought a suit in ejectment against L. E. Harrison. The suit was filed on July 5, 1921. Two amendments were allowed to the answer. The jury, after the charge of the court, found the premises in dispute and $100 as mesne profits in favor of the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and exception is taken to this judgment. So far as the issues of fact are concerned, the case turned upon whether there was a mistake in the execution of the deed by which the land in dispute, a tract'of about four acres, was conveyed by Ed Holmes to Zenobia Harrison through mistake instead of to Nina Harrison, and whether the suit was filed within four years after the plaintiff attained her majority. The evidence as to the first [866]*866point is sharply in conflict, and the evidence as to the second point at first blush is apparently vague; but upon a review, of the evidence as a whole, we are satisfied that sufficient evidence was introduced to authorize' a recovery in behalf of the plaintiff, applying to her the inflexible rule that the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of her own title, and not upon the weakness of the title of her adversary. While there is evidence which would have authorized the jury to find that there was a mistake on the part of Ed Holmes, the grantor, in making the deed to Zenobia instead of to Nina Harrison, the grantor himself testified positively that he drew the deed and intended to draw it to Zenobia Harrison. It has been too frequently ruled to require citation of authority that it is within the province of the jury to prefer the testimony of one witness to that of any number of witnesses swearing to the contrary. And in this case there are several circumstances which tend to corroborate the testimony of Ed Holmes, who swore unqualifiedly that he executed the deed intentionally, as he was directed at the time of its execution, to the plaintiff, who was then, prior to her marriage, Zenobia Harrison. The jury had also before them the fact that after the making of the deed considerable bitterness had arisen between the grandmother of the two sisters and other witnesses in behalf of the defendant and the plaintiff and her husband, whereas there was'no possible reason why the witness Ed Holmes, the grantor, should be swayed in favor of the plaintiff, to whom he was in no wise related, while he was a brother-in-law of the defendant by reason of the fact that the latter had intermarried, after the death of Zenobia’s mother, with a Miss Harrison, who was his sister. The testimony of the defendant’s witnesses was further impeached by the testimony of the plaintiff herself, who stated that both her father and uncle, the defendant, had stated to her more than once that the original deed was delivered to the grandmother for Zenobia when she was about four years old, and contained her name as the grantee; and John Harrison, who admitted he was an agent for L. E. Harrison in the transaction, tried, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, to induce her to make a deed to L. E. Harrison, and made the same admission. We have thus summarized some’ of the salient features of the evidence to show that the finding of the jury, contrary to the contention of the defendant, was amply supported by the evi[867]*867dence; and the verdict having the approval of the trial judge, it would not be disturbed as a finding that there was no- mistake in the original execution of the deed, under a rule universally recognized. The suit was filed on July 5, 1921. The deed was executed when Zenobia, according to the testimony of her father (who was one of the defendant’s witnesses), was about four years old. There was no conflict in the testimony that her father lived on the place about two years, and L. E. Harrison, the defendant, testified he had been in possession twenty years. According to this adverse testimony, the plaintiff was twenty-six years of age at the time of the trial on May 2, 1924. But while there is no testimony of any witness' as to when the deed was written and delivered, or as to the exact date of the birth of the plaintiff, it is very plain, since the suit was filed on July 5, 1921, that the plaintiff was but little .over twenty-three years of age at the time she instituted the action. The verdict, being authorized by the evidence, must stand unless there was some error of law in the trial which contributed to or caused the finding of the jury. We shall therefore next consider the special grounds of the motion for a new trial, in which complaint is made of errors of law.

The plaintiff in error alleges that the court erred in giving the following charge to the jury: “She insists that the defendant has been in possession of the land fox a certain number of years, and she insists that she is not only entitled to collect [recover] the premises in dispute but the value of the rent for all those years, she being a minor at that time. The plaintiff insists further that she brought this suit within four years after she became twenty-one years of age, and for that reason she is entitled to collect rents.” It is insisted that this instruction was harmful and prejudicial to the defendant, because there was no evidence that the plaintiff brought the suit within four years after she attained majority, and because the plaintiff was not undertaking to collect the rents for the entire period the defendant was in possession, but the declaration of the plaintiff only sought to collect rents from January 2, 1918; whereas the evidence was that the defendant went into possession about the year 1901. It is insisted that this instruction gave the jury to understand that they could consider the amount of mesne profits for the entire period in which the defendant was in possession. The jury had before them the [868]*868plaintiff's declaration in ejectment. They also had before them, in addition to the defendant's answer, his amendments thereto in which he set np the value of alleged improvements against mesne profits. It is very plain that in the language used by the court at the outset of his charge he was merely stating the contentions of the plaintiff; and so considered, there was no error in the language used. But if this were not sufficient, the invalidity of the exception is apparent in that, as alreadjr shown in the discussion of the evidence, the fact that the defendant went into possession in 1901, and the plaintiff's suit was filed in 1921, confirming the calculation deduced from the evidence of different witnesses which satisfactorily established that the plaintiff's suit was brought “within four years after she attained her majority,” and the finding of $100 as mesne profits, when the uncontradicted evidence placed the rental value of the premises at $40 per year, evidences that the jury made a liberal allowance for improvements to the defendant.

Exception is also taken to the following charge of the court: “I charge you that if you believe that the defendant, L. E. Harrison, had been put on notice, before he purchased the land in question and went into possession of the same, that the true title was not in the party from whom he purchased, but that it was in the plaintiff, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 528, 160 Ga. 865, 1925 Ga. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-hester-ga-1925.