Shrouder v. State
This text of 49 S.E. 702 (Shrouder v. State) 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
ness may refresh and assist his memory by the use of any written instrument or memorandum, provided he finally speaks from his recollection thus refreshed, or is willing to swear positively from the paper.” Civil Code, § 5284. In Printup v. James, 73 Ga. 583, .Mr. Chief Justice Jackson doubted whether it was possible for the recollection of a witness to be refreshed by an instrument which he did not prepare. In Lenney v. Finley, 118 Ga. 427, there is, however, a distinct ruling that the recollection of a witness may be refreshed by such an instrument, provided he ultimately swears from his recollection as thus refreshed, but that in order to. testify positively from the paper itself he must either have made the- paper himself or, at some time when the facts were [617]*617fresh in his memory, have known the facts stated in the paper to be correct.
The prosecutor claimed to own the land and the fence. The accused claimed to own the land, and therefore asserted what she believed was her right to remove the fence, which she did because it interfered with the cultivation of the land. The question of ownership of the land is, under the evidence, close and doubtful. The husbaud of the accused was at one time owner of the land. He conveyed it to Mrs. Clements. After this conveyance a homestead was set apart to the husband as the head of a family. The conveyance to Mrs. Clements was for the purpose of securing a debt due to her. After the death of the husband Mrs. Clements was proceeding to eject the accused, and Raines, at the request of the accused, seems to have paid up an amount which satisfied Mrs. Clemants’ claim upon the land, and a deed was made to Raines. There was an agreement between the accused and Raines that he should hold title to the property, not only until the amount paid Mrs. Clemants was repaid but also an additional sum which the accused owed to him. The accused claimed that she had paid Raines the entire sum that she owed him. It is claimed by Raines, that he and the accused agreed to divide the land ; the accused to take the south half and he the north half; that a deed was made and delivered to the accused by virtue of this agreement ; and that thereafter Raines sold the north half to the pros[618]*618ecutor. The accused admits the existence and payment of the Clements claim by Raines, but she denies the agreement as to the division of the land and denies that she ever accepted the deed to the south half, though she admits that the paper was delivered to her son, who was living with her and attending to her business, and that it was found among his papers after his death. The rights of Raines, and therefore of the prosecutor, depend largely upon the question as to what interest in the land the homestead attached to. If it attached to the equity of redemption after the payment of the Clements’ claim, the accused had no right, after -the death of her husband, to sell or encumber this homestead interest; and a deed from her to any interest in the property to which the homestead had attached would be absolutely void. See Whittle v. Samuels, 54 Ga. 548. From what has been stated it is apparent that this controversy between the accused and the prosecutor is not one which the law contemplates as proper for solution upon the criminal side of the court. What might be the legal rights of the accused claiming under her husband, or the equities of the prosecutor claiming under Raines, are questions too intricate and delicate to be settled by a jury in the trial of a misdemeanor case. A new trial should have been granted on the ground that there was no evidence to authorize the verdict. It has been more than once said by this court that the indictable trespass act of 1866 was not intended to be used as a substitute for the action of ejectment, and we avail ourselves of this opportunity to announce that neither was it intended that it should take, in our jurisprudence, the office or dignity of a bill in equity.
Judgment reversed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
49 S.E. 702, 121 Ga. 615, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shrouder-v-state-ga-1905.