Moody v. Vondereau

62 S.E. 821, 131 Ga. 521, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 14, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 821 (Moody v. Vondereau) 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
Moody v. Vondereau, 62 S.E. 821, 131 Ga. 521, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 138 (Ga. 1908).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

(After stating the facts.)

1. This is the first grant of a new trial to the claimant, and under the Civil Code, §5585, the judgment will not be disturbed unless, the law and the facts demanded the verdict. The plaintiff in-error contends that the title of the claimant depends on the validity of the tax sale at which Davis was the purchaser, and that this sale is void for the reason that the description of the [524]*524land in tbe levy and in the sheriff’s deed is so vague and uncertain that it is impossible to locate the land, even with the aid of parol evidence. If the claimant’s title be found invalid, the verdict would be demanded by the evidence.

It is essential to the validity of a deed that the land granted be sufficiently described to enable it to be identified. Any description will suffice which identifies the land with such certainty that the specific parcel intended to be granted can be ascertained, either by the calls of the instrument as applied to the land, or by aid of the descriptive portions of the grant. As was said in Crawford v. Verner, 122 Ga. 814 (50 S. E. 958), “the test as to the sufficiency of the description contained in a deed is whether or not it discloses with sufficient certainty what the intention of the grantor was with respect to the quantity and location of the land therein referred to, so that its identification is practicable.” The same rule for determining the sufficiency of a deed made by an individual applies to a deed made by the sheriff, for the sheriff is but the agent of the defendant in execution, constituted and authorized by the law to convey to the purchaser at.sheriff’s sale the title of the defendant in execution. Where a deed purports to convey a part of a larger territory it must contain something by which the smaller area can be segregated from the larger. Does the deed from the sheriff to Davis measure up to this requirement ? The descriptive clause of the deed is “a tract or lot of land lying in the 216 district G-. M., said county [the deed was executed in Clarke county], containing twenty-five acres, it being a part of the W. H. Ficklin lands, bounded on the west by Sandy Creek Bridg'e Boad, on the north by part of the Ficklin lands, on the east by an unknown street, on the south by lands owned by Loan Association of Henrico county, Ya., Thomas Potts, treasurer; levied on as- the property of the defendant, W. H. Ficklin; pointed out by J. T. Anderson, agent.” The western and eastern boundaries are respectively a road and a street, and are therefore fixed and certain. The southern boundary calls for the land owned by the Loan Association of Henrico County, Ya., Thomas Potts, treasurer. The plaintiff in execution offered in evidence a tax deed from Weir, sheriff, to Thomas Potts, conveying “about twenty-five acres of land, more or less, in Clarke county, Georgia, and in [525]*525the corporate limits of the city of Athens, and bounded as follows: On the west by Sandy Creek Bridge road, on the north by other lands of W. A. Ficklin, and on the south and east by streets, said land being in a triangular shape.” It is her contention that this • is the deed under which the Loan Association of Henrico County, Va., Thomas Potts, treasurer, acquired title to the land described as the southern boundary, and that this boundary can only be fixed by the terms, of the deed, and that the land is so indefinitely described therein that it is incapable of exact location. . We may readily concede that this deed is invalid as title, because of its indefinite description of the land, under the ruling in the case of Huntress v. Portwood, 116 Ga. 351 (42 S. E. 513). 'But it does not follow from this circumstance that the call for the Loan Association tract as a southern boundary could not furnish a line of boundary between the parcels of land claimed to be owned by the Loan Association and that sold to Davis. The call of the Davis deed for the southern boundary therein described is not for the deed to Potts, treasurer, or any -lines fixed in that deed, but for the line of another ’tract of land, viz.: that of the Loan Association of Henrico County, Ya. Where the line of another tract is called for in the description of a deed as one of the boundaries of the land conveyed, the line must be run to such boundary line. If the boundary is given as the land of another, the. description of this particular boundary will be sufficient, although the name of the person given as an adjoining owner may be incorrect, if it be made to appear that the maker of the deed recognized him as the owner, and as claiming the land at the time the deed was made. 2 Devlin on Deeds, §1014. The designation of another tract as a boundary is part of the description of the land conveyed, and extrinsic evidence is admissible to show its location. When this is done, the line of such tract becomes the boundary line of the land called for by the deed. It was shown in this case that the Potts tract had been definitely marked out before the land in controversy was sold to Davis at the tax sale. We can not agree, therefore, with the contention of the plaintiff in execution that the southern boundary of the land in controversy is not susceptible of exact location.

2. We have come to that point in the construction of the deed from Weir, sheriff, to Davis, where we find that the land purporting to be conveyed is bounded on the east, west, and south [526]*526by boundaries susceptible of exact location; it only remains to consider whether the northern boundary, from the calls of the deed, is capable of being located. It will be noticed that the conveyance is of a definite and exact number of acres of land. Ordinarily the quantity of the land enumerated in a deed is immaterial, but when the boundary line is not clearly stated, then the quantity becomes an important and material element in the description of the land conveyed. In the deed before us we have these factors: the land is to be cut off from an irregularly shaped tract of land belonging to W. H. Ficklin, the defendant in fi. ; the parcel to be detached is to contain twenty-five acres, and is bounded on a road on the west side, by a street on the east side, and by another tract of land on the south. These lines as given in the calls may not strictly conform to the points of the compass, but they are definitely located by fixed physical boundaries. Is it not a fair inference that it was intended that the line between the larger and the smaller area should run from east to wrest, and be so located as to include twenty-five acres between the northern and southern boundaries ? If the northern boundary line be run due east and west, it could only be located at one place so as to embrace twenty-five acres. It is a cardinal rule in the construction of deeds that a deed will not be held to be void for uncertainty if by any reasonable construction it can be upheld. Certainly it is not unreasonable to say that the parties intended the northern boundary should be run due east and west, when by so doing the grantee receives twenty-five acres of land with boundaries as stated in the deed. This question was before the Supreme Court of North Carolina in the case of Webb v. Cummings, 127 N. C. 41 (37 S. E. 154). In that case the grantor owned an irregularly shaped tract containing 430 acres; he conveyed to his wife 200 acres. The descriptive language in the deed was' “a-certain tract of land situated on the.east side of [the grantor’s] tract he now resides on, to contain 200 acres, and adjoining the lands of D. Y. Mercer, W. Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 821, 131 Ga. 521, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moody-v-vondereau-ga-1908.