Rowe v. Henderson Naval Stores Co.
This text of 77 S.E. 17 (Rowe v. Henderson Naval Stores Co.) 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.
Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
It is true that two witnesses say in their affidavits that “for a number of years W. W. Gaskins and those claiming under him have had possession of lot of land number 508 in the _ 6th district of said State and county,” but it does not appear how long “a number of years” was, or who those claiming under him were, or whether the plaintiff was one. It had been shown that Western & Gunn went into possession in 1887 or 1891, but there was no evidence to show that they ever went out of possession, or whether they still were in possession and claimed the rights under the timber lease from P. H. Gaskins. We áre left entirely to conjecture as to this. Nor does the fact that the timber lease from P. H. Gaskins to the plaintiff in the court below was “duly witnessed and recorded” help the situation, there being no evidence that the [322]*322purchaser from the administrator bought with notice of the prior deed from the decedent under whom the maker of the lease claimed. It can not be said, therefore, that the “duly witnessed and recorded” .lease of the land in controversy was notice to the defendant. Nor is the evidence of certain witnesses who testified for the defendant, “that for a number of years W. W. Gaskins and those claiming under him have had possession of lot 508 in the 6th district of said State and county,” of benefit to the plaintiff, in the absence of such fact being brought home to the defendant. It is argued that the administrator could not sell property with title to which his intestate or testator had parted in his lifetime; that John Reynolds by his will ’devised any such lands as he owned at the time of his death. It is a sufficient answer to this contention to say that if John Reynolds himself, in his lifetime, had made two deeds to the property, one long before the other and unrecorded, and the other subsequently and recorded, the recorded deed would have priority, no possession or actual notice of possession being involved. The administrator’s deed recited a consideration; and while it was argued that there was in fact none, there was no evidence to that effect.
Without discussing whether the decisions in the cases of Bullock v. Dunbar, 114 Ga. 754 (40 S. E. 783), Hodges v. Stuart Lumber Co., 128 Ga. 733 (58 S. E. 354), and Gorham v. Montfort, 137 Ga. 134 (72 S. E. 893), are entirely reconcilable, it is sufficient for the purposes of the present case to say that it was not one dependent on an effort to invoke a presumption .or inference of settlement of an estate, assent to a legacy, payment of purchase-money, or the like, in favor of one in possession of the propertj^, but it rested upon the simple question of competition between two deeds—one made by a decedent and unrecorded, and the other made by his administrator and recorded. The court erred in granting an interlocutory injunction against the defendant, and in not granting an injunction against the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.
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77 S.E. 17, 139 Ga. 318, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowe-v-henderson-naval-stores-co-ga-1913.