If you are indeed only retrieving the value from the database and not also writing its value back, such as a read only property, there is nothing inherently wrong. Especially if the property cannot exists without its parent. However in implementation it can cause maintainability problems. You are coupling the process of retrieving stored information with access to that information. If you continue to follow this pattern for other properties, and aspects of your storage system change, the change could proliferate throughout your code base. For example a table name or column data type change. This is why it is bad to have database calls in your property getter.
On a side note: if the database is throwing exceptions when you try to retrieve the value, then obviously there is a bug in your code (or the calling client's code) and the exception will still surface regardless of where you put the data access code. Many times data is backed by some sort of collection within the class that can throw exceptions and it is standard practice to store property values in this manner (see EventHandlerList).
Properties were designed specifically because programmers need to perform additional logic when getting and setting values, such as validation.
With all of that having been said, reexamine your code and ask yourself "how easy will this be to change later?" from there you should be on your way to a more maintainable solution.