Whitley v. Lide

SHARPE, J.

Complainant Wliitley bought land from defendants and received a deed which described the land by government numbers and as containing 750 acres, more or less To the defendant A. O. Lide he gave a mortgage on the land to secure a deferred payment of the pnrcha.se price. Payment was not made at the stipulated time and the laud was about to be sold under a power in the mortgage when Whitley filed the original bill in this cause seeking to enjoin the sale and to abate the purchase money by so much as represents a tract of 1G0 acres of the land embraced in the deed, upon the ground that defendants induced him to believe they owned that tract, that they did not have or convey title thereto, and were insolvent non-residents. By a cross-bill A. 0. Tide sought a decree of foreclosure. This appeal is from a decree rendered on final hearing dismissing the original bill and granting relief under the cross-bill.

Whitley’s acceptance of the deed and his execution of the moi’tgage, amounted to an acknowledgment on his part that his vendors or one of them had title, and together with the admitted fact of non-payment, showed prima facie that the mortgagee was entitled to foreclosure. Therefore, the burden was on Whitley both in the case made by the original bill and that presented by the cross-bill to prove the alleged lack of title. His effort, in that direction has been to prove this tract of land belonged to one Sims, who was the owner of lands adjoining. The evidence is in some conflict as to whether complainant Whilev has since his purchase had all this ICO acres in possession, but it shows conclusively that he has cultivated part of it and has not been evicted from any part of it. Tt does not serve to trace the title from its original source to either Sims or the defendants. Sims, though residing within the jurisdiction, has not been *179made a witness, but in behalf of complainant several witnesses have been examined whose testimony tend to show that at the time of complainant’s purchase Sims liad title to the land in question by adverse possession on the part of himself and those to whose rights he has succeeded. No less in number or apparent credibility are the witnesses testifying for defendant on this subject, and their testimony, if true, shows that for more than ten years next before he sold it to complainant, the defendant, B. A. Lide himself and through others, whose rights had been conveyed to him, had held, used and claimed the land openly and in adverse possession, and so, if in no other way, was invested with title. In our opinion, the evidence relating to this issue of title does not preponderate in favor of complainant Whitley, and it follows, without regard to the conflicting evidence as to defendant's alleged insolvency and non-residence, that the decree must be affirmed.

Affirmed.