Carrol v. Gillion

33 Ga. 539
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 33 Ga. 539 (Carrol v. Gillion) 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
Carrol v. Gillion, 33 Ga. 539 (Ga. 1863).

Opinion

By the Court

Lyon, J., delivering the opinion.

This was an action of ejectment for the recovery of lot of land, No. 139, in the third district of Dougherty, by the heirs-at-law of John Guyton, deceased, who were shown to be his widow, Ann Guyton; his daughter, Tabitha Guyton, and two deceased sons, Charles Guyton, represented by George Carrol, as his administrator, and Thomas N. Guyton, represented by Elvira L. Guyton, as administratrix, and Francis Thomas, as administrator, on his estate. The plaintiff put in proof a grant from the State of Georgia to Matthew Favor; a deed from Matthew Fa^or to Richard J. Willis; deed from Richard J. Willis to Thomas Baber, and a deed from Thomas Baber to John Guyton, all recorded.; letters of administration on the estate of Charles Guyton to George Carrol, and letters of administration on the estate of Thomas N. Guyton to Elvira L. Guyton, and Francis Thomas. The loeus being admitted the plaintiff closed.

Defendant offered one William S. Jarvis as witness, who testified that he knew the lot of land and had been acquainted with it for a long time; that Joab J. Gillion, the defendant, first went into possession of said land in April, 1845, and cleared and enclosed ten or fifteen feet over the west line of the land ; that Gillion told him he bought it at Newton at that time, and that his possession began at that time, and that he claimed the whole lot of land from that time to the present; that he used the land for getting rails, wood and timber, for any purpose he wished, as men usually use their wood lands; that he (Gillion) enclosed the ten or fifteen feet for the express purpose as he said of taking possession of the lot of land, and that Gillion cultivated from that time to the present, and that he had every year gathered the crops off of [541]*541said lands, and that the enclosure extended about half way down the land line.

Cross-Examined — Said that he had known the land since 1845, after Gillion said he had bought it at Newton, and that he took possession of it to claim it under said purchase; that he used it for cutting timber for rails, wood and other purposes; that it was not used to cut such timber off wild lands adjoining owner’s plantation; that the witness was a mere boy, sixteen or eighteen years old, in April, 1845; he had seen the numbers first in 1845, and had seen them several times, and constantly since that time, and had seen the blazes on the lines; did not recollect what kind of trees the numbers and blazes were on; did not know whether they were on old or dead or live or green trees; but they (the numbers) looked old like they had been there a long time and had not been cut down, and did not know whether they were dead or green trees ; had given his answers to interrogatories in this case; does not recollect that he swore in those answers that he had never seen the numbers on the land, and don’t recollect either that he swore in his answers to these interrogatories that the first land enclosed in said lot by Gillion, was in 1853 ; that he helped Gillion to clear the first land he ever cleared on said land; that he is the nephew of Gillion; has been living in Terrell county for about three years, but was now in the act of moving to Dougherty county to settle on land of Gillion, near to the land in dispute; that in 1853, witness helped Gillion to clear or enclose about one hundred acres on the west side of said land; that said land was worth $20 per acre, and $2 per acre for rent, and it was worth about $10 per acre to clear the same; Charles W. Eoby ran away from Baker county about 1845.

Defendant introduced and put in evidence a deed from Charles W. Eoby, as Tax Collector of Baker, for said lot of land to Joab J. Gillion, he being the purchaser thereof at the sale of said lot, on the first Tuesday in April, 1845, before the court-house door at Newton, in Baker, for taxes'that had been assessed by said Eoby, as Tax Collector and Eeceiver for Baker county, on and against said lot of land for the years [542]*5421839, 1840, 1841, 1842, 1843 -and 1844, for the aggregate amount of eight dollars and seventy-one cents, as for taxes in arrears and unpaid by said lot for said years. The land was knocked off in parcels to Gillion, at the aggregate sum of twenty-two dollars and fifty cents, and for this consideration the deed was made.

Defendant also put in evidence a notice published in the Georgia Courier, of which the following is a copy :

“Georgia, Baker County.

To all persons concerned :

You will please take notice that I do hereby charge and assess taxes and double taxes on lot of land Number 139, in the 3d district of Baker county. ■ The amount of taxes due are from the year 1838 to the year 1844. The owner will please take notice that I will issue an execution for the amount of taxes due thereon on the 1st day of October, and shall proceed to sell the same in terms of the law.

Given under my hand this, the 16th day of November, 1844. (Signed)

Charles W. Roby, T. R.

November 16, 1844.”

Plaintiff, in rebuttal, put in answers of William S. Jarvis to interrogatories sued out by defendant. He knew lot of land 139, in third district of originally Early, now Dougherty, county, and has known it for the last fifteen years ; that J. J. Gillion is in possession of it, and went into possession of it, to the best of his recollection, some time in April, 1845. He' used the timber of said land for building, for boards, shingles, for baskets, for various other uses, before he settled on said lot; he has since settled on said lot of land, and has enclosed some hundred or more acres of land, and has some fifty acres or more in cultivation; he has all the time claimed it in any way he saw proper ever since he bought it at Newton; said he had bought it when he came home, and said that his possession commenced at that time, which was in April, 1845, and that he has never been out of the possession since he bought the said land.

[543]*543Answers to Gross-Interrogatories. — In answer to the question, what he calls posssession, and how many and sizes of the houses, and amount of timber cut off said land, he answers : “ to have and to hold, and to use in any way he chooses; has built eight houses; witness does not know the sizes of the houses, but large enough to live in, and were put up out of logs, and by hand.” There was considerable cut off the land, and for the purposes already stated in the second interrogatory.

To the 2d cross-interrogatory he answers: “ That there was some hundred or more acres enclosed on the west line of said lot, enclosure running north and south; he is acquainted with the lines of said land, but never saw the numbers; the first land was enclosed on said lot in 1853; that Gillion moved on said land in 1853; there was a house, and some two or three acres, well and orchard, on said land before Gillion bought it; he moved on it some time in 1853.” Executed 25th May, 1858.

Plaintiff also put in evidence the depositions of Charles "W. Horn: “ He had seen lot of land No. 139, in 3d district of Dougherty county, saw it first in the summer of 1852; Mr. Joab J. Gillion claimed to be in possession of it at the time, showed it to me, and said he had bought it at tax collector’s sale some years previous; judging from the course of the lines, as pointed out to me by Mr. Gillion, and the course and shape of the cleared land adjoining, my opinion was, and still is, there was little or no open land on the lot at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Ga. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carrol-v-gillion-ga-1863.