There are many assignments of error, but all depend upon the success of the attack made on the plaintiff’s title. The plaintiff alleged ownership and possession of a tract of land, and prayed an injunction against the defendant’s alleged trespass. The defendant in his answer set up an adverse title. Both parties claimed title from John S. Lee. According to the evidence submitted by the plaintiff, John S. Lee died intestate, leaving a widow, Sarah M. Lee, and five children. His estate was partitioned in the superior court among his heirs, and the land in controversy was assigned to Sarah M. Lee. She mortgaged the land; the mortgage was foreclosed, and the land was sold. The plaintiff derives title by mesne conveyances from the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale.
I. The petition for partition of the estate of John S. Lee was filed by the guardian of one of the heirs, who was a lunatic. Service was acknowledged and twenty days notice waived by the other co-owners, who filed an answer praying that their shares be also assigned to them in severalty. A writ of partition duly issued, partition was made by commissioners, and a return made, wherein the land in controversy was assigned to Sarah M. Lee. The return was duly made the judgment of the court. Objection was made that evidence of title could not be introduced without reference to it in .the pleadings; that it was not shown that the applicant was a duly appointed guardian, or that his ward was of unsound mind, and that the statutory.notice was given; nor that the commissioners were duly sworn. None of these objections to this evidence are meritorious.
2. The evidence was sufficient to show the existence and loss of the mortgage from Sarah M. Lee to the Georgia Loan and Trust Company, and there was no error in receiving in evidence a certified copy of it.
3. The mortgage from Sarah M. Lee to the Georgia Loan and Trust Company was foreclosed on the petition of Dwight M. Bank, who alleged himself to be the assignee of the mortgage and of the notes to secure the payment of which the mortgage was given. The rule nisi was granted at the March term, 1895, returnable to the succeeding October term, and two entries of service ap
4. The petition to foreclose the mortgage was in the name of Dwight M. Bank as transferee, and the rules nisi and absolute fol
5. The purchaser at the mortgage-foreclosure sale was Dwight M. Bank, and the sheriff made a deed to him. It was shown by parol that Bank sold the land to H. A. Mathews, who went into possession of the same under his purchase about the year 1898. The plaintiff introduced in evidence a deed from Dwight M. Bank to H. A. Mathews, bearing date after the bringing of the suit, and reciting that it was executed in lieu of a deed between the same parties to the same land, executed on February 23, 1898, which deed was said to have been lost. Objection was made to this deed coming in evidence, on the ground, among others, that it was executed after the suit was begun. The plaintiff alleged title in himself, and sought to enjoin the defendant from trespassing on the land. The deed was inadmissible as evidence of title, because it was executed after the commencement of the suit, and the recital in the deed could not bind the defendant who did not claim under it. L. & N. R. Co. v. Ramsay, 134 Ga. 107 (67 S. E. 652). But the reception of the deed in evidence was harmless error, as no objection was urged to the plaintiff’s proof that Bank sold to Mathews, who paid the purchase-money and went into possession of the land. These facts constitute a perfect equity, as effectual to pass title as if the original deed had been produced. Grace v. Means, 129 Ga. 638 (59 S. E. 811).
6. The defendant’s title was derivative from Sarah M. Lee, and originated subsequently to the mortgage of Mrs. Lee to the Georgia Loan and Trust Company. Inasmuch as the plaintiff’s title was not invalid for any of the reasons assigned, and as the defendant claimed possession of the land, it was proper to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.