Coggins v. Griswold
Coggins v. Griswold
Opinion of the Court
Two questions are made in this case: First, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the deed of executors .of Brown and the letters testamentary without the will of
The suit was ejectment for the lot, and the title of plaintiff is perfect, if this link from the executors of Brown, deceased, to plaintiff be sound.
Accordingly, at the same September term, 1875, an order was passed allowing the executors to sell the perishable property, and that the usual citation be published in the Union and Recorder for leave to sell the real estate, and be returnable to the October term, 1875.
Thereupon, at that October term, 1875, no person objecting, an order was passed granting leave to sell the Baldwin _
Whereupon, on the 11th day of April, 1877, a deed was made by the executors to the plaintiff, in which it is recited that at private sale on the first of April, 1877, the lot was put up and exposed to sale and knocked off to the plaintiff, who was the highest and best bidder.
Under the order the executors could have sold to the plaintiff without putting the lot up at auction ; therefore, while it is irregular to have done so, we do not think that it is such an irregularity as make's void the deed so as not to pass the title.
So, too, in regard to the application for leave and the order to sell — the one not precisely following the other— whilst they might have been drawn with more accuracy, yet taking them and construing them together, it appears clear that the ordinary granted leave to sell the entire realty of testator — the cultivated land at public outcry according to law, and the wild land at private sale or otherwise as deemed best by the executors. •
The defendant was a mere squatter with no written title at all, and therefore she did not hold adversely to the true owner, and it was unnecessary to recover possession before the executors could sell. Code, §2564. See also Code, §§2557, 2559, and 50 Ga., 231, before cited.
We know no reason why the executors could not embrace in one application the grant of leave to sell cultivated and wild land — the one at public and the other at private sale — and publish the citation usual in each case ; and this seems to have been done, nor was it necessary to describe the land. As it was done it was better to have been done accurately by number, etc., and as lying in Gilmer, originally Cherokee ; but it does not, we think, make void the ' sale. The presumption is that the ordinary did his duty, and saw from proofs before him that it was to the interest of the estate to sell, and, nobody objecting, he granted the order.
Judgment affirmed.
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