Johnson v. Henderson
Johnson v. Henderson
Opinion of the Court
This is a land title registration case. It involved % acre of land in the northwest corner of Land Lot 138 of the 16th. District of DeKalb County, Ga. The proceeding originated when Para Lee Henderson filed her petition to register her claim of title by reason of 20 years’ adverse possession of % acre of land in the northwest corner of Land Lot 138 of the 16th District of DeKalb County, which she described by metes and bounds. She named B. A. Johnson, Jr. as a party asserting claim to the tract. Her petition, under the provisions of Code Ann. Ch. 60-2, was referred to an examiner.
B. A. Johnson, Jr. thereafter intervened and asserted his claim of title to the tract under four links in his claim of paper title and prayed that title be registered in his name. In each link the property described in the deed is % acre more or less in the northeast corner of Land Lot 138 of the 16th District of DeKalb County, with no description of the metes and bounds other than the lands of other named persons. The petitioner for registration demurred to the intervention on the grounds
The record discloses that the petitioner Henderson was seeking the registration of title to a described tract of land containing % acre of land in the northwest corner of Land Lot 138 of the 16th District of DeKalb County. Johnson, as an intervenor or claimant, asserted title by reason of certain described deeds of predecessors in title. In each of these deeds the property described therein is ^4 acre more or less in the northeasi corner of Land Lot 138 of the 16th District of DeKalb County. The examiner was correct in concluding that the land claimed by Johnson was not the same tract of land sought to be registered by Henderson. See Conyers v. West, 210 Ga. 190 (78 SE2d 422), and Bennett v. Rewis, 212 Ga. 800 (96 SE2d 257). His order dismissing the claim of Johnson was proper. Though the court should have overruled the exception to the examiner’s order dismissing the claim of Johnson, instead of dismissing the exception, the result was correct.
The intervention or claim of Johnson having been properly dismissed, he ceased to be a party to the hearing before the examiner and was not in a position to except to the examiner’s ultimate findings. His exceptions to such findings were properly dismissed. Asbury v. McCall, 202 Ga. 154 (42 SE2d 370).
There being no error in the judgment of the trial court, it is
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHNSON v. HENDERSON
- Status
- Published