Johnston v. Neal

67 Ga. 528
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 67 Ga. 528 (Johnston v. Neal) 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
Johnston v. Neal, 67 Ga. 528 (Ga. 1881).

Opinion

Speer, Justice.

This was a claim case in which a verdict was returned finding the property subject. A motion for new trial was made, which was overruled, and plaintiff in error excepted. The ft. fa. levied was in favor of John Neal, transferee, vs. James H. Hill, Paul E. Tarver and Edwin T. Jones, partners using the firm name of James H. Hill & Company, and was issued on the 27th December, 1857, for the sum of $6,913.64, with interest and cost. The ft. fa. was levied on the north half of city lots in the city of Albany, No. 26, on Jackson street and No. 28 on Residence street, as the property of E. T. Jones. To this levy plaintiff in error interposed a claim. The levy was made 1st December, 1868, the claim interposed on 17th January, 1881.

[530]*530Plaintiff in fi. fa. introduced in evidence his fi. fa., and •proved that one of the defendants in fi. fa., E. T. Jones, was in possession of the premises levied on in 1858 or 1859, after the date of the judgment, and closed.

Claimant introduced in evidence a deed from E. T. Jones to E. Tompkins for the premises in dispute, dated 1st October, 1859, aad also a deed from Tompkins to J. A. Hill, and from Hill to claimant; also a release from John Neal, plaintiff, to C. P. Hartwell, releasing over one-third of the Freddie Tarver place, also the Hartwell plantation which was levied on by this fi. fa. The Hartwell place contained 1,260 acres, the Freddie Tarver place 2,000 acres The claimant proved Neal had been paid the money for the release on the Hartwell place ; would sell for cash at two or three dollars per acre. The third interest in the Tarver place would sell for $1.00 per acre ; other testimony valued it at $5.00 per acre. There was testimony that Tompkins and his tenants and claimant and his ten. ants occupied the premises in dispute continuously from date of sale by Jones to the time of this levy.

In the motion for new trial the plaintiff in error insists that the verdict was contrary to law and evidence, and that the court refused to charge the jury the following written requests made by counsel for claimant:

(1.) “ If the proof shows that Tompkins and his tenants, including claimants, had continuous possession of this property under a written deed from Jones from 1st October, 1859, and such possession was bona fide, continuous and notorious up to the time of -this levy, 1st December, 1868, then I charge you the claimant had a good prescriptive right. This is the true rule of law upon this subject since the adoption of the Code 1st January, 186.3 ; the possession of claimant, if as above stated up to the levy, is good as adverse possession, because- the statute of limitátions, as to real estate, was changed by the Code, and title by prescription was adopted in lieu thereof. Hence prescriptive title was not affected by the act suspending [531]*531the statute of limitations. But previous to the Code of 1st January, 1863, the statute of limitations as to real estate was suspended, and hence you deduct from the adverse possession, as appears of proof, the time from the 14th December, 1860, to 1st January, 1863, and if it leaves over seven years possession by claimant, then you should find the property not subject.”

' (2.) “ If the proof does not show that the claimant had notice of this levy until his claim was made, then I charge you that the prescriptive right continued to run until such notice of the levy was proved, or the interposition of this claim. If such was the proof, then you should find the property not subject.”

(3.) “ If the proof shows that Tompkins purchased from Jones in October, 1859, and that the Hartwell plantation and one-third of the Freddie Tarver place was the property of Paul Tarver, one of the defendants, and that of his executors after his death, and that this was after ,859, then the claimant had the right to have these two plantations sold under said Neal fi.fa., and if the proof shows that John Neal, for a valuable consideration, released these two plantations from his judgment, then I charge you this property cannot be subjected, but such release operates in law to discharge this property.”

1. One of the main questions involved in this cause, and on which the court below ruled adversely to the plaintiff in error, was whether a title by prescription would prevail against the lien of a judgment in a claim case. The first written request to charge made by claimant’s counsel refused by the court, affirms this principle.

The statute declares “ that adverse possession of land under written evidence of title for seven years shall give a title by prescription. The exception is that if such written title be forged or fraudulent, and notice thereof be brought home to the claimant before or at the time of the commencement of his possession, no prescription can. be based thereon.” Code, §2683.

[532]*532In the case of Jones vs. Bivins, 56 Ga., 538, this court announced the rule that the exceptions specified in the Code by which a prescriptive title will be defeated are exhausted and will not be enlarged by construction.” So also in the case of Janes, administrator, vs. Patterson, 62 Ga., 527, where the vendee of land, holding a bond thereto with part of the purchase money paid, sold and conveyed the same by deed, and the vendor, before the sale obtained judgment for the balance of the purchase money and levied the execution thereon, and a purchaser deriving title from the purchaser from the vendee, claimed the same and relied upon the four years’ statute to discharge the land from the lien of the judgment for the purchase money, he and those under whom he held having had possession for more than four years before any legal levy was made, it was held, that if the purchase was bona Jide and for value, he was protected only to the extent of the interest in the land which the defendant in execution held under the bond for titles. But where, under like circumstances, the purchaser relied upon the adverse possession of himself and those under whom he claimed for more than seven years, as giving him title by prescription against the legal title held by the vendor as security for his purchase money, the ordinary statute of prescription would run in his favor, both before and after the deed from the vendor to the vendee, and after the lapse of seven years, the prescriptive title would be complete against the vendor’s title, and would protect the land claimed under the title by prescription against a levy made after the seven years had expired. This being the rule as recognized by this court, did the evidence in the case authorize the charge as requested? The fi. Ja. was issued 27th December, 1857, and was levied 1st December, 1868, on the premises as the property of Jones ; Jones sold the property to a bona fide purchaser for value under whom claimant holds, on 1st October, 1859. 1° 39 3<$6, this court held the statute of limitation was suspended from 30th November, [533]*5331861, until 21st July, 1868. The statute ran against this fi. fa. up to 30th November, 1861, making, counting from its date, three years eleven months and three days.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ga. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-neal-ga-1881.