Allen v. Bone

43 S.E.2d 311, 202 Ga. 349, 1947 Ga. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 12, 1947
Docket15823.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 S.E.2d 311 (Allen v. Bone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Bone, 43 S.E.2d 311, 202 Ga. 349, 1947 Ga. LEXIS 445 (Ga. 1947).

Opinion

Head, Justice.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) 1. The plaintiff in error (defendant in the court below) filed two amendments to his motion for new trial, one amendment containing ten grounds, and the other, one ground. The complaint made in the first ground of the first amendment was in regard to a portion of the charge of the court. The trial judge before approving this ground corrected a mistake in the stenographic report of this portion of the charge. The plaintiff in error concedes that, if the trial judge is allowed to make this correction, there is no error in the charge. This court must accept the record of a lower court as approved by the trial judge, and this ground of the amendment therefore presents no question for determination.

2. Ground 2 complains of the charge of the court as follows: “Now with reference to the line between them, plaintiff contends that they not only have title by deed but that they have title by prescription, and that the line between the two has become fixed by reason of acquiescence in that line by the adjoining property owners, Mrs. Bone and Mr. Allen. Acquiescence for seven years, by acts or declarations of adjoining landowners, shall establish a dividing line. To establish a line by acquiescence it must appear that the owners of the property to be affected by the establishment of the line either acted in such a manner for the space of seven years, or made such declarations during the continuance of that period as to show that the line claimed was the true line between the estates.”

It is contended that this charge was erroneous because it presented to the jury the principle of law in regard to acquiescence in a boundary line by the plaintiff in error, whereas he claimed that the defendants in error had acquiesced in a line established by processioners for more than the seven-year period necessary to estop them from disputing such line.

*352 It is not contended that the charge as given was unsound as an abstract principle of law. Immediately following the charge complained of, the court instructed the jury as follows: “Now the defendants come into court and they deny all these contentions of plaintiffs, and they say the true line between the property of Mr. Allen and the plaintiffs in this case is a line that was established as' the result of a proeessioner proceedings had in the court of ordinary in this county, and they introduced into evidence thereto certified by the ordinary of this county, which they contend not only shows, but is a true dividing line between the property of the plaintiffs and defendants in this case.” The court further instructed the jury: “When the plat of the surveyor is introduced in evidence, as has been introduced in this ease, it is to be considered and accepted as prima facie correct. That doesn’t mean, however, that it is conclusively .correct, it is prima facie correct, and it may be rebutted by proof.”

The charge of the court on the contentions of the plaintiff in error correctly stated his contentions as shown by his pleadings and the evidence, and no reversible error is shown in this ground of the motion for a new trial.

3. Special ground 3 is incomplete, in that it would require reference to another ground in order to understand the assignment of error. Bowen v. Smith-Hall Grocery Co., 146 Ga. 157 (4) (91 S. E. 32).

4. In special ground 4, it is insisted that there is an “absence of any testimony to establish adverse possession of the strip of land in dispute by the plaintiffs even for seven years under color of title, or by twenty-years’ adverse possession.” It is contended that the testimony of Mrs. Bone and her father shows that some time during the period of her ownership of the lands, to wit, 1913 to 1945, the lands were sold before the com'thouse door and bought in by her father and reconveyed to her. The contention here made .is an elaboration of the general grounds, that the verdict is without evidence to support it.

On the question of possession, Mrs. Bone testified in part: “I have been in actual, notorious, and adverse possession of this tract of land for 34 years. . . There was a turn row there and we always went to the turn row. I have .been in possession since 1913, which is 34 years ago.” With reference to the sale of the *353 property, Mrs. Bone testified in part as follows: “During the 34 years I have been in possession of this property it was levied on and sold, but was made back to me. It was sold at public sale here in Danielsville, but it was deeded back to me. It was sold and my father bought it and deeded it back to me. . . I have not been out of possession the whole 34 years I have had this land.”

There is nothing in the record to indicate under what process the land was sold, the time when it was sold, nor the period of time between the purchase by the father of Mrs. Bone and a reconveyance by him to her. If the property was sold for taxes, no right of possession would have accrued in the purchaser until after the period of redemption had passed.

With reference to the sale of the land,' Frank Glenn, father of Mrs. Bone, testified in part as follows: “This land went to sale at public sale. I never disturbed her [Mrs. Bone]. I bought it in at this public sale and deeded it back to her. She has been in possession all the time.”

In Blalock v. Redwine, 191 Ga. 170 (12 S. E. 2d, 639), it was held: “In order to constitute the element of continuity which is essential to adverse possession as the foundation of a good prescriptive title . . it is not necessary that adverse possession be.maintained for the statutory period by the same person, since continuity may just as effectively be shown by the successive bona fide possessions of several persons, provided the requisite privity exists between them, so as to thus permit a tacking of their unbroken successive possessions. . . In order to show privity between successive occupants, all that is necessary is that one shall have received his possession from the other by some act of such other or by operation of law.”

Under all of the evidence, the jury might have found that Mrs. Bone was in adverse possession of the land for twenty years or more. It is not disputed that she received a deed to her property in 1913. “Adverse possession of lands, under written evidence of title, for seven years, shall give a like title by prescription.” Code, § 85-407. The jury would not have been required to find that she was in possession of the land for .twenty years in order to establish a title by prescription. She could have established a prescrip *354 tive title under her deed and proof of seven-years’ possession. The assignment of error in this ground is without merit.

5. Special ground 5 complains that “it was erroneous to submit to the jury for their consideration the question of prescriptive title in Mrs. Bone et al. by reason of twenty-years’ possession under the rules of law,” since the evidence in behalf of the defendants in error disproved possession fox the length of time required by law.

Special ground 6 contends that the court erred in submitting to the jury “the question of title by prescription in Mrs. Pearl Bone et al.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.E.2d 311, 202 Ga. 349, 1947 Ga. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-bone-ga-1947.