Brantly v. Huff

62 Ga. 532
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 62 Ga. 532 (Brantly v. Huff) 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
Brantly v. Huff, 62 Ga. 532 (Ga. 1879).

Opinion

Bleckley, Justice.

1. The true original route of an ancient highway was in controversy, and the agreed issue was as to the location of a boundary line which was co-incident with one of the borders of that route. The cause on trial was a bill in equity in which Brantly was complainant, and Huff defendant, together with two public boards as co-defendants, one the county board of commissioners and the other the district board of road commissioners, the former board having power to order public roads to be laid out, altered or discontinued, and the latter having the immediate supervision of construction and repairs. A map made by the county survey- or after the dispute arose, and founded on a survey made by him at the instance of the complainant and the board of road commissioners, with notice to Huff, but not in his presence or with his consent, was not admissible in evidence for the complainant, even in connection with the testimony of the surveyor showing it to be correct according to the data used as a basis of survey. It is apparent that neither the surveyor nor the road commissioners knew personally said data to be adequate means of identifying the [534]*534trae route of the road, except as identification might result from following courses and distances from certain fixed points; and the important line mentioned in the description, by which the survey was guided, was one border of the road, the location of which was under search. It was within the discretion of the court to allow the map to go-to the jury as a mere diagram to illustrate, or aid in understanding, the testimony of the surveyor, or that of other-witnesses, but the map was not evidence as an official document, or as in the nature of an admission by the road commissioners, they having no power to make an admission binding upon the public or upon their co-defendant, Fluff. It was competent for the surveyor to testify orally to his-survey and its results, using the map, if necessary, to refresh his recollection.

2. The official transactions of the county board of commissioners of Bibb county (see pamph. acts of 1873, p. 219),. are presumed to be recorded as the law requires, and they cafinot be proved by parol, without first accounting for the-non-production of the better evidence. Moreover, if the board directed a survey to be made by the county surveyor to ascertain the route of an old road, that would not commit the board to the results of the survey, nor would any presumption arise that those results were correct.

3. Copies of the proceedings of one of the district boards of road commissioners of Bibb county (see pamph. acts of 1871-2, p. 221) showing the efforts of the board to ascertain and fix the route of an old road in their district, are-no evidence against themselves, or against the county board of commissioners, or against a land-owner, on the question of where the true route is, such proceedings not having resulted in any re-opening or re-occupation of the route sought to be discovered. The road commissioners have no power to bind the public or the owners of land by a mere deliberative recognition, whether announced through resolutions, reports or otherwise, of definite lines and routes. Their functions in respect to locating public roads are executive — not legislative or judicial.

[535]*5354. Where the trial is had upon a distinct issue carved ■out of the general case by consent of all the parties, and reduced to writing, the charge of the court should not raise other issues and leave the jury free to make the verdict turn on them. The complainant alleged that his land was burdened with a short section of road never established as a highway, but brought into use as a temporary detour from the ancient track, and that the defendant, Huff, had encroached with his fence upon the disused track. Huff insisted that no detour had been made, and that his fence was upon his own line along the border of the ancient highway, and hence constituted no encroachment. It was agreed in writing at the trial that the case proceed for the determination of his boundary, with power in the jury to find that the detour, if any, be discontinued, and the ■disused track, if any, be re-opened or restored by the commissioners at Huff’s expense. Certainly, on this narrow issue it was error to instruct the jury that if there was a -detour, and the same had been in the possession and use of the public for seven years before the filing of the bill, then the title of the public to the detour itself was complete, and the public could not be deprived thereof, though the time ancient track was elsewhere. It was also error to instruct the jury, that although the defendant, Huff, might be in possession of land (meaning the disused road) to which he had no title, the complainant could not deprive him of it, if he, the complainant, had no title either. By the terms of the agreed issue, Huff’s title was the only title under examination, relatively to the space occupied by the disused road. The object was to ascertain and fix his boundary, which done, the ancient road would necessarily be ascertained and fixed, the border of that road being the conceded limit of his land. It was also error to ■instruct the jury, that if Huff had encroached on the disused road, that was a question between him and the county board of commissioners, and with which the complainant had no concern, unless the property thus taken^was shown [536]*536to belong to him. It was also error to instruct the jury in respect to the criminal law applicable to obstructing roads. And the width of the road was not otherwise involved in the issue than as it might be a guide in finding and tracing that particular border along which Huff’s boundary lay. There was no dispute that from that border the road extended and ought still to extend to the full-width required by law.

5. In arriving at a boundary line the jury are not restricted to the courses and distances laid down in the deed. If permanent monuments, natural or artificial, such as a public road, are also specified in the deed, and there is satisfactory evidence that those monuments have been found, and that they are still in their original places, they will check and modify the courses and distances which conflict with them; for courses and distances are among the lowest indicia of boundary — not the highest.

6. But a public road, of course, may change, and when this occurs, the boundary does not change with it. When the road is moved or transferred to other soil, the boundary remains behind. A boundary line which was coincident with a border of the road, will not rest upon the corresponding border in the new position. Substantial, and not trivial changes, are here spoken of.

7. What is not conceded, either in the pleadings, or by the parties or their counsel in the presence of he court, cannot be recited to the jury from the bench as conceded; but where matter is stated in the charge as a concession, and it does not appear on the authority of the judge himself that no such concession was in fact made, the presumption is that it was made.

8. The complainant’s theory is, that he and the defendant, Huff, are coterminous proprietors; that Huff’s land extends to the border of the public road, and that his own land lies adjacent; that the road, as it foimerly existed both defacto and dejure, and as it still exists de

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Bluebook (online)
62 Ga. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brantly-v-huff-ga-1879.