Reid v. Wilkerson

149 S.E.2d 700, 222 Ga. 282, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 9, 1966
Docket23445
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 S.E.2d 700 (Reid v. Wilkerson) 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
Reid v. Wilkerson, 149 S.E.2d 700, 222 Ga. 282, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 458 (Ga. 1966).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

To a petition seeking injunction and cancellation of documents as clouds upon title to land, the trial court sustained general demurrers and pleas of laches and estoppel. Those rulings emanated from a suit filed in the Superior Court of Houston County by Lois Burnam Reid against R. A. Wilkerson, Modern Homesites, Inc., The Citizens State Bank, Henry Burn-am, Bessie Burnam, and James E. Bryant.

The petition, as amended, made the essential allegations which follow.

The plaintiff for the past 22 years has lived upon described land located in Land Lot 148 of that county.

Her mother, Cora Burnam, on February 22, 1942, executed to her a warranty deed conveying the remainder interest in 101.5 acres in Land Lot 148, besides other land not now in question.

At that time the plaintiff was not aware that her mother and her brother, the defendant Henry Burnam, had in 1941 executed to Macon Production Credit Association a security deed, recorded in that year, purporting to convey land which included 101.5 acres in Land Lot 148. The brother then had no interest in the land and the mother did not intend for him to have any interest therein.

The plaintiff did not have personal knowledge of this security deed until about two years before filing this suit. She then also learned that Henry Burnam had not paid the loan he incurred and that the security deed had been foreclosed and the property unlawfully sold to C. B. Watson on May 7, 1943.

*283 Nevertheless, Watson did not occupy any land in Land Lot 148 or do anything to show that he owned it. The description in the foreclosure deed is so vague that it is impossible to identify any land in Land Lot 148 from its reading, and therefore it conveyed nothing and provided no notice that this was the property occupied by the plaintiff. Watson knew that the plaintiff was living on the land in Land Lot 148, claiming title thereto, farming it each year, holding exclusive possession of it, and notoriously holding it out as her land; yet he took no action to identify any land in Land Lot 148 as being that passing under the foreclosure deed, and did not inform her that he was claiming any of her land. Furthermore, the aforementioned security deed did not contain any power of sale allowing the grantee to convey title at foreclosure and did not expressly confer upon the grantee the authority to perfect a foreclosure deed. The deed to Watson is for these reasons null and void.

Watson, on December 27, 1944, unknown to the plaintiff and without legal title, sold the land he purchased at the foreclosure sale to Henry Burnam, who had previously defaulted on the loan, referred to above. But he did not take possession of any land in Land Lot 148 or do anything to show possession or ownership. The plaintiff continued unmolested in her occupation of her land and continued to hold exclusive possession, cultivating and using the property as always.

After her mother died in the summer of 1942, plaintiff claimed title to the property under the aforesaid deed of February 1942. She went into active possession in the fall of 1942, cleared the land., planted crops, had various and sundry dealings with Federal and county governments on the basis of ownership, completely dominated and controlled the 101.5 acres in question, and held it out as her own continuously, openly and notoriously. No one gave her any reason to believe she did not have a good title to the land. So complete was her adverse possession under her deed as color of title that by the fall of 1949 her title had become complete and was no longer subject to being defeated by anyone under any claim whatsoever so long as she maintained her title and possession.

Henry Burnam, by two deeds in 1957, purported to convey to *284 his wife, the defendant Bessie Burnam, property which included 40' acres- in Land Lot 148. These deeds create clouds on plaintiff’s title and should be stricken.

Henry and Bessie Burnam executed a land option contract in 1959 to the defendant Wilkerson and also a quitclaim deed on April 26, 1965, to the defendant Modern Homesites, Inc. These two documents concern land in Land Lot 148 and form the claim of Wilkerson and Modern Homesites, Inc., to plaintiff’s land. The quitclaim deed attempted to convey 98.7 acres in Land Lot 148 which is part of the land owned by the plaintiff. When such documents were executed these four defendants knew that the plaintiff owned the land and had continued to hold it exclusively since' 1942, cultivating it and holding it out as her property above the’ claims of anyone. So notorious-was her claim that Henry and Bessie Burnam did not interfere with her until they executed the deed to Modern Homesites, Inc., in 1965.

By letter dated May 24, 1965, Modern Homesites, Inc., notified plaintiff' to vacate the land in Land Lot 148. Wilkerson, 'an officer and agent of Modern Homesites, Inc., signed this letter as its agent. On June 12, 1965, they moved on the land with a bulldozer, moving' dirt, cutting down trees and evicting a'tenant. The defendants are unlawfully upon the plaintiff’s property and are trespassing and interfering to such an extent that she will suffer irreparable damage. She seeks injunctive relief prohibiting the defendants from asserting ownership and title to her property.

In June 1965 Modern Homesites, Inc., conveyed to the defendant Bryant a 5.25 acre tract in Land Lot 148. This deed casts a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to her land.

The instruments sought to be canceled of record as clouds upon .the plaintiff’s title to property in 'Land Lot 148 are as follows: the foreclosure deed, the two deeds from Henry Burnam to Bessie Burnam, the land option contract from Henry and Bessie Burnam to Wilkerson, the deed from Henry and Bessie Burnam to Modern Homesites, Inc., and the deed from Modern Home-sites, Inc., to Bryant.

The prayers included that the defendants deliver up. these deeds and that they be canceled, that the defendants ■ be en *285 joined from coming upon her land, moving dirt, cutting down trees or doing any act asserting title to the land, and general relief.

To this amended petition, the defendants, except Henry and Bessie Burnam, filed answers, general and special demurrers and special pleas of laches and estoppel. The contents of these special pleas will be set forth hereinafter.

Upon the sustaining of such general demurrers and special pleas, the plaintiff appealed to this court.

From our study of the petition, we conclude that it states a cause of action on account of adverse possession of land for 20 years, pursuant to Code § 85-406.

It is therefore unnecessary to deal with contentions relating to the alleged invalidity of the 1941 security deed and its foreclosure, or seven years adverse possession under color of title. The allegations as to 20 years adverse possession alone render the petition sufficient to withstand general demurrer.

They meet the reqüirements of Code

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.E.2d 700, 222 Ga. 282, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-wilkerson-ga-1966.