Palmour v. Roper

45 S.E. 790, 119 Ga. 10, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 14, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 790 (Palmour v. Roper) 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
Palmour v. Roper, 45 S.E. 790, 119 Ga. 10, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 3 (Ga. 1903).

Opinion

Candler, J.

In February, 1888, Palmour borrowed $2,000 from Smith, executing his promissory note therefor, and also, as security for the payment of the note, a warranty deed to certain land in Dawson county. Subsequently, at different times during the same year, he borrowed $300 more, for which he also gave notes. The land conveyed by the deed referred to was described, not by metes and bounds, but by the numbers of the land-lots, the entire land conveyed consisting of thirty-three land-lots and a designated fractional part of another land-lot, with the exception of a life-estate which had already been conveyed in certain of the lots mentioned and a small tract which had been set apart for use as a church. Palmour failed to pay the notes when they fell due, and in 1900 Smith obtained two judgments against him, one for ■$2,000 and the other for $300. Each of these judgments contained provision for a special lien upon the land conveyed by the deed executed to secure the notes, and described the land by the [13]*13number of the land-lots, in the same manner in which it was described in the deed. Upon the $2,000 judgment an execution issued, directing the sheriff to sell the land, and the description contained in the execution followed that in the deed and the judgment. In due time and form the sheriff advertised the property for sale, but announced in the advertisement that certain of the lots, which were designated, would be “ sold together in one parcel, the same being'known as .the mineral lands, on which there are supposed to be valuable minerals;” that certain other designated lots would be sold together in one parcel, “the same being known as the farm and farming lands of said defendant; ” and that “ lot No. 494 as above described [would] be sold separately, it being apart from the other lots.” On the first Tuesday in December, 1900, the property was sold by the sheriff in two parcels, one comprising what was known as the mineral lands, which brought $750, and the other the farm, which brought $4,525. The present action arose upon an equitable petition filed by Palmour against Roper, the sheriff, Black, the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, and Smith, to set aside the sale by the sheriff. By amendment McKee and McClure were also made parties defendant, it being alleged that Black bought as trustee for himself and them; and in a supplemental petition an injunction was prayed against Ashley, Van Vleck, and the Georgia Dredging Company, to restrain them from entering upon the land and committing certain alleged threatened injury thereto. A temporary restraining order was granted, and a temporary receiver appointed, in accordance with the prayers of the supplemental petition. The original petition alleged that the “said tracts of land, levied on and described as aforesaid, are entirely separate and distinct the one from the other, and were conveyed to [Smith] separately, and not as component parts of a single tract; ” that the property “ was so conveyed by him with the view to an ultimate sale thereof in such manner as would assure to the said Smith the payment of his money, and at the same time protect petitioner against the consequence of an attempt to sell said property in bulk and under a single bid; ” that the value of the land sold was $25,000, and the price paid therefor, $5,275, was “so grossly inadequate as to shock the moral sense;” that there were at the sale numbers of persons who were able and willing to buy said tracts of land, if sold separately, at prices which would [14]*14have more than paid the debt and still left a large proportion of the land, but there were none who were either able or willing to purchase the property when sold in bulk and pay a fair price therefor, all of which was known to the sheriff and the purchaser at the time of sale; and that many persons present at the sale were prevented from bidding, because of legal doubts as to the validity of a sale in bulk when a sale of one fourth of the property in separate parcels would have realized a sum sufficient to pay all demands against the defendant in execution. Roper, Black, and Smith filed separate answers, and McKee and McClure answered jointly. The case was submitted to a jury, who found for the defendants ; and the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial being overruled, he excepted.

1. One of the main contentions of the plaintiff in error is, that the deed from Palmour to Smith conveyed the land in separate and distinct parcels, each parcel constituting a land-lot; that the judgment attached against the land in separate parcels; that the execution directed the sheriff to sell it in separate parcels; and that, although the lots “ happened to lie contiguous to each other,” the sheriff had no power to sell them otherwise than separately. Error is assigned, in the motion for a new trial, upon the charge of the court submitting to the jury as a question of fact whether the laud constituted several parcels or was an entire tract, and instructing them that in the former event the sheriff would be bound to sell the parcels separately, while in the latter he would “ have a right to levy upon it all, unless by such levy it Would be an excessive levy,” or that he might, in his discretion, divide the property himself and sell it in parcels, if he could do so without injuring the value of the property.” It is contended that the court should have instructed the jury as matter of law that the property constituted separate and distinct parcels, and that the sheriff was bound to sell it as such. It will have been observed that the judgments and the execution merely followed the deed in the designation of the property which they covered; and so the question really hinges upon whether the deed from Palmour to Smith was intended to convey the land as separate parcels or as a tract or tracts composed of different designated land-lots. We fail to see how it. can be said, as matter of law, that a deed which conveys to the grantee “ lots of land numbers fourteen, fifteen, sixteen,” [15]*15etc., necessarily implies a segregation of the lots named. It is a well-known fact that land-lots are laid off purely for purposes of location and description, and have no reference to divisions of land into what are known as tracts, or parcels, except as the two may arbitrarily chance to coincide. It is by no means infrequent for the grantor in a deed, where the land conveyed consists of a single large tract, to describe it solely by the numerical designation of the land-lots embraced. The advantage of this method of description, in avoiding the inaccuracies and confusion likely to result from an attempt to describe the land by metes and bounds, is easily apparent. It can not, therefore, be said, because a deed describes the property conveyed as land-lots numbers one, two, and three, that those land-lots do or do not constitute separate parcels. In Baxter v. Mattox, 106 Ga. 344, a deed conveyed all the timber on certain “ lots or parcels of land,” describing them by the number of each and the district where located; and it was held that the period of limitation in such a conveyance should be computed, as to the entire lands embraced in the deed, from the time the grantee enters upon any one of. the lots, “ there being nothing in the conveyance to indicate an intention by the parties that the instrument should be treated as a separate lease to each lot.” So also, in the case of Conley v. Redwine, 109 Ga.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 790, 119 Ga. 10, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmour-v-roper-ga-1903.