Godley v. Hinely

142 S.E. 86, 165 Ga. 717, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 27, 1928
DocketNo. 5831
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 142 S.E. 86 (Godley v. Hinely) 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
Godley v. Hinely, 142 S.E. 86, 165 Ga. 717, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 55 (Ga. 1928).

Opinion

Bussell, C. J.

Mrs. Carrie Walton Godley, individually and as guardian for named minor children, and Josephine and Bobert L. [718]*718Godley individually brought an equitable petition against E. B. Hinely, alleging that they were the owners of a described tract of land containing about 5,700 acres, known as the Monteith plantation and Drakie plantation, and attaching to the petition an abstract of title showing title in them; and that the defendant had entered upon said land without authority so to do, and had unlawfully cut therefrom approximately 600,000 feet of timber. They prayed for a temporary and permanent injunction, an accounting, and damages for the trespass. The defendant answered and set up that he had in good faith purchased from Washington Kessler, Perry Kessler, and Emerson Graham, by separate conveyances, the timber and trees claimed; and he vouched the three named parties into court as defendants. The Kesslers filed their answer setting up that they had been in the quiet, peaceable, open, and notorious possession of said lands, under duly recorded deeds, for more than forty-five years; which right, title, and possession had been acquiesced in by the owners of the Monteith plantation, including the husband and father of the petitioners. Emerson Graham and Mrs. Emerson Graham filed an answer in which they set up that they and their predecessors in title had been in public and adverse possession, for more than forty years, of all that tract of land bounded (so far as now involved) on the “east by the westermost channel of stream following through Monteith swamp, and which stream formerly separated it from lands of Crabtree, now lands of Godley and others.” The defendants’ land adjoins that of the petitioners. The real issue in the case is as to the location of the dividing line between the lands of the several parties. .The petitioners claimed that the true dividing lines were those as shown in the deeds, thus including in their land all of the property known as the Monteith swamp. Emerson Graham and Mrs. Emerson Graham contended that the true line was the run of the swamp, and based their claim upon an alleged agreement between their predecessors in title, Joe Hinely and Nathan Godley, whereby it was claimed a dispute as to the line was settled by fixing the run 'of the swamp as the true line. Washington and Perry Kessler contended that the channel of the swamp had been established as tlie true dividing line by acquiescence therein by the predecessors in title of the petitioners. The jury returned a verdict in favor [719]*719of the defendants. The plaintiffs filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and exception was taken.

Though there are twenty-six special grounds in the motion for a new trial, it will not be necessary to deal with all of them in this opinion. Several of the grounds raise the same point of law, although addressed to different features of the case. The first question for decision is whether a partner or cotenant, whichever may be the relationship,- can bind his copartner or cotenant in land, so as to affect the interest of the latter, by.an agreement with a coterminous-land owner fixing a different line from that called for by the deeds under which the partners hold.

It appears that Washington Kessler as a witness was asked the question .whether he was present when the line in question was discussed and an. agreement was made as to where that line should be between Nathan Godley and Joe Hinely. The plaintiffs objected to the question, on the ground, among others, that any declaration of Nathan Godley would not be binding on the other partner, W. S. Godley, and therefore not binding on the partnership property. The court overruled the objection, and permitted the witness to testify. Later the plaintiffs moved to exclude the testimony upon the same objections. We are of the opinion that the evidence should have been excluded after the question was answered, though preferably the witness should not have been permitted to answer the question. A partner can not convey lands-in behalf of a partnership, so as to divest the individual interest of his copartner; from which it naturally follows that he can not, by agreeing to a new line even to settle a disputed boundary, deprive his copartner of his interest in over 500 acres of land, as would be the result in this case. It was admitted that at the time the alleged declaration was made the property was in the possession of a partnership composed of W. S. and Nathan Godley, and the testimony which the plaintiffs sought to exclude stated a declaration of one partner as to partnership property; and this declaration could not convey partnership property.

One partner can not execute a deed conveying partnership realty, which will be binding on the firm. Drumright v. Philpol, 16 Ga. 424 (60 Am. D. 738); Sullive v. Jones, 61 Ga. 676; Turner v. Printup, 65 Ga. 71. While it is true that an oral agreement fixing a dividing line between adjoining owners, if such line has been in [720]*720doubt or dispute, is not regarded as passing title to any real estate, but merely as defining the line between such owners (Farr v. Woolfolk, 118 Ga. 277, 45 S. E. 230; 4 Thompson on Real Property, § ,3103 and notes), it would nevertheless seem, where the effect of such an agreement, if enforceable against the partnrship property, would be to authorize one partner to deprive the partnership of several hundred acres of land, that the principle announced in the Drumrighl, Butlive, and Turner cases, supra, would, by analogy at least, fender such agreement by one partner ineffectual as against the interest of the other. A partner derives his power to bind the partnership by reason of being a general agent of the firm (Merchants &c. Bank v. Johnston, 130 Ga. 661, 664, 61 S. E. 543, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 969, 14 Ann. Cas. 546); and it has been held that the location of boundary lines by an agent of the owner will not bind the owner in a subsequent controversy between such owner and the adjoining owner. O’Hare v. O’Brien, 107 Cal. 309 (40 Pac. 423). Real estate owned by a partnership is held by the members of the firm as tenants in common. 2 Thompson on Real Property, 969, § 1773, note 27. It has been held that a dedication of a highway to public use can not be made by one cotenant without the consent, express or implied, of all the other part owners. Holcomb v. Coryell, 11 N. J. Eq. 548; Scott v. State, 1 Sneed (Tenn.), 629. Upon similar principles, in this •case, even if the alleged statement of Nathan Godley be sufficient to constitute an agreement settling and fixing a disputed line, we are of the opinion that such declaration was ineffectual to change the status of the partnership property. It is not contended that W. S. Godley, the other partner or cotenant, either authorized or ratified the alleged agreement. On the other hand, the only testimony upon this point is that of W. S. Godley himself, who testified that he had no knowledge of the alleged agreement. See Lagow v. Glover, 77 Tex. 448 (14 S. W. 141), where it was held that the agreement or acquiescence of one heir, fixing an uncertain or disputed dividing line, does not bind the other heirs, all the heirs being tenants in common of the property.

From the nature of this case the error in the admission of the testimony above set forth and similar evidence requires the grant of a new trial. It is true that the defendants also claimed under a prescriptive title arising from adverse possession for more

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.E. 86, 165 Ga. 717, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godley-v-hinely-ga-1928.