Tapley v. Claxton

23 S.E.2d 426, 195 Ga. 61, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 718
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 1, 1942
Docket14368.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 S.E.2d 426 (Tapley v. Claxton) 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
Tapley v. Claxton, 23 S.E.2d 426, 195 Ga. 61, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 718 (Ga. 1942).

Opinion

1. "A plaintiff in ejectment must recover on the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of the defendant's title." Code, § 33-101. The only instrument in evidence that purported to transfer title to the disputed land to either the plaintiff or his deceased father, under whom he claimed, was a quitclaim deed, executed in 1939 by the heirs of the father to the plaintiff, which showed no title as against the defendants' prior deeds, and alleged possession at the time of the suit.

2. As to the plaintiff's alleged prescriptive title by twenty-years actual adverse possession, his own testimony and that of the other witnesses showed that all of the disputed sixty-two acres, except about six acres of cultivatable land with a grist-mill which all the testimony showed had been used or occupied by the defendants' predecessor in title at least from 1923 to 1926, was covered by a mill-pond; and that this pond ran dry when a dam broke, either in 1928 according to plaintiff's own testimony, or between 1923 and 1926 according to other witnesses, since which time "there has been no pond." While there was a general inadequate statement by plaintiff that his father, as predecessor in title, had "owned and was in possession" of the disputed premises, "which had gone dry," for thirty years as "timber land," there was no evidence or contention, adequate in legal effect or otherwise, that the father had occupied such land or exercised any dominion over it or any portion of it while covered with water as a mill-pond to the year 1928. Accordingly, since the evidence of and for the plaintiff failed to show any such acts of dominion over the land for twenty years before the filing of the suit, the court did not err in directing the verdict for the defendants, or in refusing a new trial. The plaintiff's case having failed for the reasons stated, it is unnecessary further to consider other questions presented, as to his alleged failure to show a prescriptive title by possession. See Holloway v. Woods, 195 Ga. 55 (23 S.E.2d 254).

Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.

No. 14368. DECEMBER 1, 1942.
In 1941 LeRoy Tapley, one of the heirs-at-law of F. M. Tapley, and grantee under a quitclaim deed made to him in 1939 by the other heirs, brought an action against C. S. Claxton, J. W. Claxton, and C. B. Harrison, to recover sixty-two acres of land described as "lying in the Fortner Mill Pond tail, and being owned by the said F. M. Tapley at the time of his death" in 1938. The plaintiff relied chiefly on a prescriptive title by twenty years or more of actual adverse possession. The defendants relied on actual adverse possession under their deeds in evidence. At the trial in March, 1942, the court directed a verdict for the defendants. *Page 62 The plaintiff excepted to the refusal of a new trial, on the ground that it was error to direct the verdict, and on the general grounds.

The only deed in evidence to the plaintiff or his deceased father, under whom he claimed, that purported to include the land in dispute was the quitclaim deed made in 1939, to the plaintiff by the heirs of the father. Other deeds in evidence, to and from F. M. Tapley, the father, apparently excluded or did not refer to the "Mill Pond" land in question. In 1904 J. M. Page conveyed to the father 125 acres, bounded on the "east by O. S. Fortner Mill Pond," and 120 additional acres, without any reference to the "Mill Pond" land. In 1926 F. M. Tapley conveyed to Joiner 69 acres of the 245 obtained under the deeds last mentioned, leaving 176 acres. In 1928 F. M. Tapley executed to Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company a security deed conveying 190 acres, but describing the property as bounded "East by Fortner Mill Pond," and the boundary as "being along the line of the high-water mark of the Fortner Mill Pond." A surveyor's plat in evidence, made in 1928, also showed the eastern boundary of the 190 acres as extending only to the high-water mark of the "Mill Pond." In 1933 the insurance company under a power of sale conveyed to itself the land as thus described, and in 1934 reconveyed it to F. M. Tapley. In 1934 he executed to Federal Land Bank of Columbia a security deed conveying 180.2 acres, and describing the land as bounded partly on the north and east by "Fortner Mill Pond," and the line as "along the meanderings of Fortner Mill Pond." In 1937 F. M. Tapley conveyed to E. J. Claxton certain timber for "turpentine purposes" on 176 acres, describing the northern boundary as "Battle Ground Creek," which apparently included timber on the disputed 62 acres.

The defendants put in evidence a deed, made in 1895, from Malinda Price to Beann Fortner, conveying a half interest in 56 acres of land, including the mill known as the "Tapley Old Mill," and a deed, made in the same year, from John W. Harrison to Beann A. Fortner conveying the other half interest in the same property. The defendants introduced also a bond for title, made in 1923, from Mrs. Beann Fortner to W. L. Bailey, conveying 56 acres, and describing the land as apparently including part of the tract in dispute, bounded on the west by F. M. Tapley and others; "possession to be given as soon as the said W. L. Bailey moves and *Page 63 is ready to begin grinding;" a grist-mill being located on the property. This bond for title was surrendered back to the vendor. Also in evidence was a deed made in 1926, from Mrs. Beann Fortner to C. S. Claxton, one of the defendants, conveying 356 acres, and including the "Fortner Mill Pond proper," and "all water and mill privileges formerly owned by the said Mrs. Beann Fortner and O. S. Fortner; . . also the grist-mill rocks, and all machinery located on said property and formerly operated thereon."

LeRoy Tapley, the plaintiff, testified: "During my father's lifetime he owned and was in possession of 62 acres of land known as Fortner's Mill Pond or Tapley's Mill Pond, which had gone dry, and left the dry land standing there. . . My father was in possession of it thirty years or more; he exercised ownership of that property; there was no cultivatable land, it was timber land. . . He sold the turpentine rights in 1934 and 1935, and Mr. E. J. Claxton is now working it under the lease given him by my father. . . These defendants did not exercise any ownership of this property during my father's lifetime," and "nobody else ever exercised my possession of this land besides my father." Also, that the security deed, executed by the father to the Federal Land Bank included only farming land, and did not include "the Mill Pond," which was "on this side of that land." As to possession by the defendants or their predecessors in title, the plaintiff said: "I have been knowing Mrs. B. Ann Fortner about fifty-five years. . . She was living on this cultivated land adjacent to this pond there ever since I can remember. I don't know that she owned 56 acres in there; I know Will Bailey. I recall that he lived on this land adjacent to the pond from 1923 to 1926. That bond for title [Fortner to Bailey] covers 56 acres of land. Mrs. B. Ann Fortner lived on 6 acres there. It was partof the Pond. . . The dam across that pond is washed away. After Mrs. Fortner sold this land to Mr. Bailey, [she] moved away." As to the pond the plaintiff testified that the "mill pond ran drythe last time in 1928; there has been no pond there since 1928; and my father then exercised ownership of this property."

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.E.2d 426, 195 Ga. 61, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tapley-v-claxton-ga-1942.