Sears v. Bagwell
This text of 69 Ga. 429 (Sears v. Bagwell) 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
In 1808 John E. Odell sold Nevill Bennett 261 acres of land* consisting of forty-one acres on the east side of fractional lot No. 40, and 220 acres of No. 33, lying broadside to each other and on Flat creek, excepting and reserving therefrom 13 acres, which included certain shoals on the said creek.
Soon after this sale a judgment was obtained against Odell, and the fi. fa. issuing from same was levied upon the entire tract, the 13 acres included ; none, however, [431]*431was actually sold, except that reservation, which was bought by J. D. Bagwell, the defendant in this suit. In 1879, ten years after, this suit in ejectment was brought for the recovery of the whole 26'x acres, with demises from the original grantees, the administrator of Odell, and of Bennett. The real litigation, however, was over the 13 acres reserved in the deed, sold by the sheriff as Odell's property and bought by Bagwell.
The testimony of the plaintiff consisted of the original plats and grants to the two lots, the letters of administration on the estate of Odell, and- the deed of Odell to Bennett.
That of the defendant was a deed from the coroner, the judgment, ji. fa., levy, and the record of the deed to Bennett referred to in the levy, all of which was introduced over the objections of plaintiff’s counsel.
That a levy is sufficient which refers to a record that makes it certain, is no longer a contested question in this state. 27 Ga., 200.
Whilst this levy, taken by itself, maybe insufficient to identify the land, yet, are not the descriptive facts so specified in the deed as to guide the parties in locating it? To say 13 acres of land reserved out of 261 sold off of lots 40 and 33 could give no well defined idea of where it lay. But when it says that the parts of lots 40 and 33 sold lie broadside to each other on Flat creek, and that 13 acres off these lots are reserved, including the shoals and waterpower through the land, so far above the shoals as necessary for any machinery that may be put up, together with the use of timber to build, the right of way to and from the shoals, etc., it seems to us that that water-power, known as the shoals on that creek, and in so small a body of land, would form such a distinctive locality as not to be misunderstood. 59 Ga., 711.
At all events the court did right not to rule out the evidence, and in holding that it might go to the jury and the question of sufficiency be inquired into by them, the rights of a purchaser having intervened. 65 Ga., 201.
To hold that this reservation was void for uncertainty, would be to invalidate the titles to probably half the country churches, and nearly all the private family burial grounds in the state.
[433]*433We hold this charge to be error, as may be seen in the case of Bodega et ux. vs. Perkerson, 60 Ga., 516; and Whittington vs. Doe ex dem. Wright, 9 Ga., 28. In these cases it was held that our claim laws were cumulative — permissive and not mandatory.
The case, therefoi'e, must be remanded for a new trial, as it may have been that it was under this charge of the court that the verdict was rendered forthe defendant.
Judgment reversed.
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