Collinsville Granite Co. v. Phillips

51 S.E. 666, 123 Ga. 830, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 5, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 666 (Collinsville Granite Co. v. Phillips) 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
Collinsville Granite Co. v. Phillips, 51 S.E. 666, 123 Ga. 830, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 608 (Ga. 1905).

Opinion

Eish, P. J.

The Collinsville Granite Company brought an action, in the form of “ complaint for land,” against R. O. Phillips, to recover “all of the exposed granite upon one hundred and twenty-three acres of land, more or less, in land lot one hundred and eighty-four of the. sixteenth district of DeKalb county, Georgia,” which was described with particularity in the petition. Two amendments to the petition were allowed, both"of which invoked the equitable powers of the court. In one it was alleged that Phillips did not own or hold title to the property in dispute, but was tenant in possession under a bond for title from one G. W. Johnson; that the deeds under which the defendant claimed expressly stipulated that the exposed granite was reserved from [834]*834the conveyances; that Phillips was mining stone upon the property, and extending his operations to other quarries which had not theretofore been opened; that he was insolvent, and the plaintiff was on that account without redress for the waste that would be committed; and an injunction was prayed to restrain the defendant or his agents from quarrying stone on the property. The other amendment prayed for an accounting for the stone already quarried by Phillips, and also that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the property, or to take account of the income and of the stone quarried; and that the plaintiff have judgment for the value of the stone thus removed by Phillips. In pursuance of the prayers of these amendments, or ancillary petitions, temporary restraining orders were granted, but these were subsequently modified by an order granting leave to the defendant to operate the quarries until the final hearing of the petition, provided he should give bond with security to indemnify the plaintiff for any damage to the property by reason of his use of it. The defendant gave the bond required, and continued in possession of the property. The answer of the defendant denied the material allegations of the petition, and claimed that he was entitled to possession of the property sued for, under a bond for title from one Johnson. ■ It was also denied that the deeds under which the defendant claimed contained any reservation of the exposed granite on the property conveyed.The case was referred -to an auditor, who duly reported his findings to the court. Both the plaintiff and the defendant filed exceptions of law and of fact to the auditor’s report; but all exceptions were overruled, and'a decree was framed substantially following the report. Both parties excepted to the decree, and the case is now before this court for review.

1, 2. A motion was made by Phillips to dismiss the writ of error sued out by the Collinsville Granite Company, on the grounds (1, 2) that the bill of exceptions did not specify the exceptions of'lavr and fact, the overruling of which was assigned as error, as part of the record to be sent to this court, the exceptions being incorporated in the bill of exceptions and error assigned on them separately; (3) that the bill of exceptions is argumentative, and not confined to the errors complained of. We know of no reason why a plaintiff in error may not, if he sees fit, [835]*835bring exceptions to an auditor’s report to this court in his bill of exceptions rather than in the transcript of the .record, so long as they are duly certified by the trial judge who overruled them. While the practice of bringing exceptions to an auditor’s report to this court in a bill of exception's, ins'teád of specifying them as part of the record to be transmitted by the- clerk of the court below, may be open to objection, the writ of error will not be dismissed on this account. This question is settled, in principle, by the decision in Burkhalter v. Oliver, 88 Ga. 473, where this court declined to dismiss a writ of error on the ground that the different grounds of the motion for a new trial were set out in the bill of exceptions and error assigned thereon separately, the motion not being brought up in the transcript of the record. Nor is there any merit in the ground that the bill of exceptions is argumentative. Every bill of exceptions should be argumentative to the extent of setting out the reasons why the judgment or ruling complained of is alleged to be erroneous. The bill of exceptions now under discussion came up to the full requirements of the law in the clearness and definiteness with which error was assigned; and the writ of error will not be dismissed.

3. The bill of exceptions filed by Phillips complains that the court erred in overruling his exceptions of law and of fact to the auditor’s report, and in rendering judgment for the plaintiff for mesne profits. The exceptions of law were twenty-five in number. One of these purports to be an exception “ as to matter not appearing on the face of the record,” and complains that the auditor erred in not stating in his report that the plaintiff made an admission in judico which was alleged to have had a material bearing on the case on trial. We know of no rule of law permitting a' party to except in this manner to the failure of the auditor to embody material statements in Iris report. Exceptions should go to what the auditor reported, not tó what he did not report. This is so for the very excellent reason that in the absence of a report from the auditor the court has no way of ascertaining whether the matter complained of is true or not. If, indeed, the auditor’s report was not full enough, the defendant should have prayed the court for an order recommitting the report, so that the alleged omissions could have been supplied in the regular and legal manner. Civil Code, § 4593.

[836]*8364. The assignment of error complaining of the judgment for mesne profits does not complain that the amount allowed by the court was incorrect'or was arrived at in an erroneous manner, but merely that there was no evidence to authorize any judgment for mesne profits at all, and that such a judgment was not warranted by the pleadings. This contention is without merit. While the original petition did not pray in express terms for a judgment, for mesne profits, one of the amendments thereto contained a prayer on which such a judgment could be based, viz.: that plaintiff have judgment for the value of the stone which defendant had quarried from the land. Cunningham v. Morris, 19 Ga. 583. The report of the auditor affirmatively shows that ample evidence was introduced to warrant a finding for mesne profits.

5, 6. Two deeds were introduced by the plaintiff, neither of which formed any part of its chain of title, but each of which the plaintiff claimed was a part of the chain of title under which the defendant held. They were evidently introduced for the purpose of showing that W. H. Braswell, under whom the defendant claimed, never acquired any title to the granite in dispute, and, therefore, those who derived title through him never acquired any title to such granite. How the plaintiff obtained possession of these deeds does not appear. They do not appear to have been produced on the trial by the defendant, under notice served upon him for this purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 666, 123 Ga. 830, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collinsville-granite-co-v-phillips-ga-1905.