Fortson v. Caudell , 74 Ga. App. 276 ( 1946 )


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  • 1. The verdict was authorized by the evidence and the court did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.

    2. The charge given substantially outlined the contentions of the protestant as set out in the pleadings and evidence of the case and, in the absence of a timely written request, the court did not err in failing to give a more elaborate or detailed statement of the protestant's contentions.

    3. The charge complained of in special ground 2 of the motion for a new trial shows no harmful error.

    4. The verdict of the jury is supported by the evidence and has the approval of the trial judge and, no error of law appearing, it will not be disturbed by this court.

    DECIDED SEPTEMBER 27, 1946.
    W. R. Caudell made application to the land processioners of the 438th Militia District of Madison County to have the dividing line between his land and lands of S. M. Fortson surveyed and marked anew. The processioners, along with the surveyor designated for this purpose, proceeded to survey and mark said line and filed a return, to which was attached a plat certified by the surveyor, showing the line surveyed and marked anew by them. S. M. Fortson filed a protest to said return, in which he set out that the line marked and designated by the surveyor and processioners as "a straight line to the creek, N. 13 1/4 E. for a distance of 1462 feet to a beech tree on the edge of Bluestone Creek," was not the correct line but that the true line between his land and that of W. R. Caudell was "a straight line to the creek, beginning at a poplar corner and running thence N. 17 1/4 E. 1425 feet to a sweet gum on Bluestone Creek;" that the line surveyed and marked by the processioners passed through lands of protestant (description as contained in deed of protestant being set out), which lands had been in his actual possession under a claim of right for more than seven years; and that W. R. Caudell, the adjoining land owner, had *Page 277 acquiesced and agreed to the line claimed as true by protestant by acts and declarations for more than seven years; and that the said Caudell had cut a ditch up said line and that the true line claimed by protestant was plainly marked. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the applicant, and the exception here is to the judgment overruling the protestant's amended motion for a new trial. 1. It was admitted by both the applicant and the protestant that the disputed line started at a certain poplar tree and ran from this poplar tree to a corner on Bluestone Creek. The applicant contended that the line run by the processioners, which line started at the poplar tree and ran thence North 13 1/4 degrees East 1462 feet to a beech on the creek, was the true dividing line; while the protestant contended the true line between the lands of these parties began at the poplar tree and ran thence North 17 1/4 degrees East 1425 feet to a sweet gum on the creek. It appeared from the evidence that the lands owned by both the applicant and the protestant had formerly belonged to B. A. Fortson, who, on January 1, 1920, conveyed the tract now owned by the applicant to S. J. Carmichael Company.

    On December 13, 1919, some two weeks before B. A. Fortson made the deed to Carmichael Company, Fortson had the Carmichael tract of land surveyed by E. E. Stone, who made a plat of same and the plat was attached to the deed to Carmichael Company. In that deed and plat, the line now in dispute was described as running from the poplar tree (which is still there and recognized by both applicant and protestant as the corner between these lands) North 12 degrees East 22.15 chains to a stake on Bluestone Creek. The applicant, Caudell, holds under deeds from successors in title of S. J. Carmichael Company; while the protestant holds under a later deed from his sister, Mrs. Love, who inherited the land from her father, B. A. Fortson, at his death some two years after he had deeded the other adjoining tract to Carmichael Company.

    The protestant contended that the line run by the processioners went several feet from a hedgerow or turnrow and ditch, which *Page 278 ran between the lands of applicant and protestant, while the applicant contended that the processioners followed the hedgerow and that they ran and established the line described in the old deed from B. A. Fortson to Carmichael Company and in the plat and survey made by E. E. Stone, on December 13, 1919, which plat was attached to the Carmichael Company deed. The surveyor testified in part: "I ran that line according to this plat which has been introduced in evidence made by Mr. Stone in 1919 and the deed accompanying that plat; I followed the deed that was submitted to me that day. The course in that deed and plat called for North 12 degrees East 22.15 chains. I ran this disputed line from that poplar a course of 13 1/4 East 1462 feet, and that accounted for the difference in the old course of North 12 degrees East, that being the difference in the variation of the magnetic compass. According to my understanding that is substantially correct. That is as close as surveyors usually figure. In other words, if that line was run in 1919 North 12 degrees East at that time, today, by running North 13 1/4 degrees East, you have the same line. That is my understanding, twenty-six years, and you increase a degree for every twenty years, and with twenty-six years it would be a degree and a quarter as near as we can figure it."

    While the protestant testified that the line run by the processioners did not follow the hedgerow, the surveyor testified that he followed very close to the turnrow as far as it went (it only extended about 100 yards from the poplar to the edge of the woods), and one of the processioners testified that the line marked by them "went down this hedge in running the line we established there . . and hit the creek near a beech tree" while the other processioners testified the line was "right on the edge" of the turnrow. It did not appear that there were any marked trees between the end of the hedgerow and the creek, but it did appear from the evidence that the timber through the woods, from the end of the hedgerow at the end of the field to the terminus of the line at the creek had been burned over after the first survey of the line now in dispute was made in 1919, and the old timber was all down.

    The line between the lands of the applicant and protestant was in dispute, and the processioners and surveyor were called out to arrive at the true dividing line, and to trace and mark the same. It was not a question of running a new line, but was for the purpose *Page 279 of retracing a line, which the evidence shows was surveyed by E. E. Stone on December 13, 1919, and his survey was evidenced by a plat made by him at that time and the plat was attached to the deed made by B. A. Fortson to Carmichael Company, the applicant being a successor in title under that deed. The poplar tree was recognized by the applicant and protestant as the correct corner between their lands and they both also conceded that the hedgerow or turnrow from the poplar to the edge of the woods was along or on the line. There were no other recognized marks. Code, § 85-1601, under the chapter of processioning land lines, provides: "In all cases of disputed lines the following rules shall be respected and followed: Natural landmarks, being less liable to change, and not capable of counterfeit, shall be the most conclusive evidence; ancient or genuine landmarks, such as corner station or marked trees, shall control the course and distances called for by the survey. If the corners are established, and the lines not marked, a straight line, as required by the plat, shall be run, but an established marked line, though crooked, shall not be overruled; courses and distances shall be resorted to in the absence of higher evidence." Section 85-1606 provides, in part: "It shall be the duty of the county surveyor, with the processioners, taking all due precaution to arrive at the true lines, to trace out and plainly mark the same." The processioners and surveyor had a genuine landmark, the marked poplar tree, as a beginning point, and then the hedgerow, and the course and distance in the old deed and plat to go by and to aid them in arriving at the true line between the parties. The line established by the processioners and surveyor commenced at the poplar tree, the undisputed corner, and ran thence North 13 1/4 degrees East 1462 feet to a stake or beech tree on Bluestone Creek. This course and this distance corresponded with and were the same as those designated and set out in the E. E. stone plat and the deed from B. A. Fortson to Carmichael Company. That line was surveyed and marked in December, 1919, some twenty-six years before the processioners and surveyor retraced and marked it in June, 1945, according to the evidence. There is an increase or variation in the magnetic needle on the compass of one degree for each twenty years, or 1 1/4 degrees for twenty-six years, which when added to the bearing of North 12 degrees East makes the 13 1/4 degrees; and the *Page 280 distance of 1462 feet is the same as 22.15 chains, there being 66 feet in a chain.

    The protestant contended the line ran from the poplar tree North 17 1/4 degrees East a distance of 1425 feet to the creek, which neither corresponded in course nor distance with the line designated in the E. E. Stone plat and the B. A. Fortson deed to Carmichael Company. I think the processioners and surveyor observed the rules and followed the law applicable to processioning in cases of disputed land lines. There were some conflicts in the evidence, but the jury was authorized to find that the processioners and surveyor retraced and marked a line that was run between the Carmichael tract, now owned by Caudell, and the Fortson tract, about twenty-six years before. The court did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.

    2. In special ground 1 of the amended motion for a new trial, the plaintiff in error contends the court did not fairly state his contentions to the jury in that the court left out entirely from his statement of the contentions of the plaintiff in error that he contended that he had had actual possession of the land in dispute for more than seven years under a claim of right. There is no merit in this ground of the amended motion. The court instructed the jury that they were to determine the issues raised by the protest to the return of the processioners and that the protestant contended that the line marked by the processioners was not the true line but that the true line was "one beginning at a poplar and is a straight line running thence North 17 1/4 degrees East 1425 feet to a sweet gum on Bluestone Creek." The issue between the parties was raised by the protest to the return of the processioners, and was whether the line surveyed and marked by the processioners was in fact the true line between the parties or whether the line set up in the protest was the true line. With reference to possession of the protestant for seven years establishing the boundary line between him and the applicant, the court instructed the jury that "acquiescence for seven years, by acts or declarations of adjoining landowners, shall establish a dividing line." The court in his charge substantially outlined the contentions of the plaintiff in error and if a more elaborate or detailed statement of his contentions was desired, he should have made a proper written request for the same. Thompson v. Powell, 60 Ga. App. 796, 809 *Page 281 (5 S.E.2d 260); Rogers v. Rogers, 65 Ga. App. 806, 808 (16 S.E.2d 490); Bridges v. Ramsey Sign Service Co.,50 Ga. App. 583 (179 S.E. 404). In the absence of a written request, the court did not err in failing to charge more specifically on the contentions of the protestant; and did not err in overruling special ground 1 of the motion for a new trial.

    3. In special ground 2 of the motion, error is assigned on the following charge: "Now, gentlemen, there is no adverse possession in this case; I don't believe any is claimed. If there is it is in reference to a certain line, at the beginning, a ditch line, or a drain line, or a hedgerow; you have heard them discussed — I am not saying what the evidence was — and they worked up to it. If they acquiesced in a line, of course, that is the boundary line, whatever you find it to be." It does not appear that this charge was harmful to the protestant. The evidence was undisputed that the boundary line between the lands of these parties, from the end of the ditch or hedgerow to the creek, ran through woods where there was a growth of small timber. The only portion of the line in which adverse possession or the establishment of a dividing line by acquiescence of the parties could have been involved, under the evidence, was that portion of the line running from the poplar tree and ending at the edge of the woods, a distance of about 100 yards, and the court expressly instructed the jury, that if the parties acquiesced in a dividing line, that would be the line between them and that "acquiescence for seven years, by acts or declarations of adjoining landowners, shall establish a dividing line." Moreover, the evidence was that the dividing line marked by the processioners ran along the edge of the hedgerow from the poplar to the edge of the woods. It was admitted by both applicant and protestant that the hedgerow or ditch running from the poplar tree corner to the edge of the woods was the line between their lands. So, the issue between the parties as to this portion of the line was not of adverse possession or the establishment of a line by acquiescence for seven years, but merely one of fact as to whether or not the line established by the processioners ran along the ditch or hedgerow. The jury found, on conflicting evidence, that the line established by the processioners did run along the ditch or hedgerow. The charge was not reversible error for any reason *Page 282 assigned, and the court did not err in overruling special ground 2 of the motion for a new trial.

    4. The verdict of the jury is supported by evidence and has the approval of the trial judge and, no error of law appearing, it will not be disturbed by this court.

    Pursuant to the act of the General Assembly, approved March 8, 1945 (Ga. L. 1945, p. 232), requiring that the full court consider any case in which one of the judges of a division may dissent, this case was considered and decided by the court as a whole.

    Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., Sutton, P. J., Gardner andParker, JJ., concur. MacIntyre, J., concurs specially. Felton,J., dissents.

Document Info

Docket Number: 31341.

Citation Numbers: 39 S.E.2d 579, 74 Ga. App. 276, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 518

Judges: Sutton, Broyles, Button, Gardner, Parker, MacIntyre, Felton

Filed Date: 9/27/1946

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024