Davis v. W. P. Brown Sons Lumber Company

32 S.E.2d 253, 198 Ga. 486, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 434
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 21, 1944
Docket15005.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 S.E.2d 253 (Davis v. W. P. Brown Sons Lumber Company) 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
Davis v. W. P. Brown Sons Lumber Company, 32 S.E.2d 253, 198 Ga. 486, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 434 (Ga. 1944).

Opinion

Regardless of whether a petition sets out a cause of action, if the plaintiff proves every fact charged, without at the same time disproving his right to recover by establishing the existence of other undisputed facts which show that he is not entitled to a verdict, it is not proper to award a nonsuit. On application of this rule of practice to the facts of the present record, the grant of a nonsuit was error.

No. 15005. NOVEMBER 21, 1944.
This case originated by Davis filing a suit to enjoin Otha Waddell, acting for W. P. Brown Sons Lumber Company, from trespassing and cutting certain timber on land lot No. 209, in Floyd County, Georgia. Otha Waddell and the lumber company filed an answer, in which it was admitted that Waddell was acting for the company, and that he had entered upon said lot, had placed a sawmill thereon, was proceeding to cut the timber, had already cut some, and was threatening to cut the remainder. Other allegations of the petition were denied. Further answering, the defendants said that at that time they were not on land lot No. 209, but were cutting timber on lot 224, which was owned by R. L. Holland and G. S. Holland, and that they had a deed to the timber from the Hollands; but that if they were on lot 209, they had a perfect right to be there under a timber deed executed by the plaintiff, dated July 3, 1940, and duly recorded in the records of Floyd County.

Thereafter, the plaintiff amended his petition by alleging that the damage was irreparable, that the trespass was a continuous one, and would continue from day to day unless the defendants were restrained and enjoined. He further amended, and in reference to the allegation that he had conveyed all the timber on lot No. 209, admitted that he did sign and execute such a deed, but *Page 487 said that it was executed by him and accepted by W. P. Brown Sons Lumber Company through a mutual mistake of the parties as to the location of the south line of said lot No. 209; that, on the same day as the execution of the timber deed, he had bought this property, and had made no survey or measurement of it, but believed that a wire fence located on it was the south side of said lot, the same being in woods and with no cultivation on the north or south thereof, nor other sign or mark to indicate or show the south line; that he was approached by the lumber company to sell them the timber located on the lot, and, in consequence thereof and for the purpose of determining the amount of lumber located thereon and its value, he, together with a Mr. Barnes and a Mr. Gray, representatives and agents of the lumber company, went on the lot and into the woods for the purpose of seeing the timber and the lines; that at that time it was pointed out and agreed by the parties that the fence was on the south line, and that the lumber company was buying only the timber north of said fence; that the price agreed upon between the parties was in contemplation of the fence being the south line, and it was so understood and agreed upon by all concerned; that all of the plaintiff's dealings were with the said Barnes and Gray as representatives of the lumber company and with no others; that both the plaintiff and the lumber company in good faith believed that said fence was in truth and in fact the south line of the lot, and under that belief he executed and delivered to the lumber company said timber deed.

The plaintiff further alleged that thereafter the lumber company moved a sawmill on said lot north of the fence, and cut and sawed all of the timber contemplated in said timber deed, cutting none south of said fence, and removed its mill and ceased its operation there, stating that it had cut all of the timber bought by it; that it never started cutting south of said fence until approximately one year later, and has never contended, and does not now contend, that it is cutting the timber south of the fence by virtue of any right under said deed, but contends that said fence is the south boundary line of said lot No. 209, and that it has a timber deed to lot No. 224, and that the timber it is cutting is located on lot No. 224.

The plaintiff also alleged that subsequently to the execution of the timber deed by him, he found out that he was mistaken as to *Page 488 the location of the south line of the lot, and that said fence was not on said line by some 1100 feet south thereof; and that he seeks to enjoin the defendant from cutting on said lot 209 south of said fence and north of the original and true line. He prayed that his deed to W. P. Brown Sons Lumber Company be reformed to show and reflect the true intent and purpose of the parties; and that the south line of the land so conveyed by said deed, that is, the fence across said lot, be said south line, so that the deed so reformed shall convey so much of said lot 209 as lies north of the wire fence running east and west across said lot. The defendant filed a demurrer to the petition as amended, which, after a hearing, was overruled.

On the trial, the plaintiff testified in part as follows: "On the same day I bought this property from Mr. Barry Wright I sold the timber on two of these lots to the Brown Lumber Company. . . I traded with Mr. Gray and a Mr. Barnes with the Brown Lumber Company, as their representatives. . . I had no dealings with anybody else connected with the Brown Lumber Company. I did go with Mr. Gray and Mr. Barnes out over the timber when I sold it to them, and that is where we traded for it, and they more or less made an estimate as to the amount of timber there. As to whether or not out there in the woods there was an old wire fence, well, yes, sir, there was, practically all around a portion of it. At the time I bought that property from Barry Wright, I thought that wire fence was the south line of my property. I had never had any survey made of this property before I bought it from Mr. Wright. . . At the time I was going over this timber with Mr. Barnes and Mr. Gray, I pointed out that fence to them, thinking that was the south line of the timber I was selling to them, and I sold the timber to them on the basis that that was the line. Following that, they moved their sawmill in there and cut the timber down to the wire fence and stopped there and moved their sawmill and equipment away from there. As to whether or not I ever had a conversation with either Mr. Barnes or Mr. Gray after they had cut the timber down to the fence, well, yes, sir, I did with Mr. Barnes. I had given them a contract to go in there and cut it; and when they had cut it out, I wanted to sell the place or use it anyway that I could, and I wanted to get that lease out, and Mr. Barnes told me that they *Page 489 had cut all that they had bought, and told me that he could not give me a release himself, but that he would send to headquarters and get it for me at once. As to how long after that it was when they commenced cutting south of this fence, well, I don't know, it must have been a year."

A. H. Davis, the plaintiff's son, testified: "Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E.2d 253, 198 Ga. 486, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-w-p-brown-sons-lumber-company-ga-1944.