Mayes v. Simons

8 S.E.2d 73, 189 Ga. 845, 130 A.L.R. 245, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1940
Docket12987.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 8 S.E.2d 73 (Mayes v. Simons) 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
Mayes v. Simons, 8 S.E.2d 73, 189 Ga. 845, 130 A.L.R. 245, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 410 (Ga. 1940).

Opinion

Bell, Justice.

This was an action by D. L. Mayes and Miss America Mayes against the present owner of a described tract of land, Mrs. M. L. Felts, and her tenant, E. E. Simons, seeking to enjoin cultivation and other trespasses with respect to a designated portion of the land, upon the alleged ground that more than one hundred years ago it was appropriated by the plaintiffs’ grandfather as a family cemetery, and that it continued to exist as such until the husband of the present owner, after acquiring the tract *846 in 1924, “cleared olí and plowed over said cemetery lot” and removed markers from the graves of the plaintiffs’ grandparents. The petition alleged that the trespasses were continued by the defendants, and that the defendant owner and her husband as predecessor in title, under whom she now claims by devise, each knew before acquiring the property “that said cemetery lot was located thereon and that plaintiffs’ grandparents were buried therein.” The plaintiffs not only sought injunction to restrain further trespass, but prayed for judgment for a stated sum as punitive damages. The petition' alleged that there were in all. about fifteen people buried in “said cemetery lot,” but there was no allegation as to who the other people were, and the plaintiffs claimed no interest in any of the graves except those of their grandfather and of his first and second wives, the latter being the plaintiffs’ grandmother.

The defendants filed an answer, denying existence of the cemetery as alleged, and specifically averring that they had no actual or constructive notice of any such cemetery at the time of acquiring the property or possession thereof. The answer also contained the following.:, “The defendants, being in equity, for further answer state that they are willing for- the court to send an officer on to the alleged location of the cemetery lot to determine if there are any graves, located in said field and, if so, how many, and with their consent for the plaintiffs to erect a marker upon each grave so found.” In his charge to the jury, the judge submitted the case only as a suit for injunction, expressly declining to submit the claim for damages. The jury' found for the defendants. The plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial on the general grounds and three special'grounds. The motion was overruled, and the plaintiffs excepted.

The evidence showed that the last burial in the plot claimed as a óemetery occurred in the year 1868, and, although conflicting in some respects, authorized findings to the effect that the graves in question were never marked except by rocks,, without inscription, on the side of one of them, the size and number of the rocks •not being shown in the record; that by neglect and inattention, for more than fifty years the graves had ceased to bear any sign likely to attract attention to their existence as such; that the space so 'occupied had lost all appearance as a cemetery before the husband *847 of the principal defendant purchased the property upon which such cemetery lot may have been formerly situated; and that such purchase was made in good faith, and without knowledge or notice of the existence of such cemetery. Tinder this version of the testimony, which the jury were authorized to adopt, the verdict for the defendants may be sustained upon the theory of either laches or estoppel. On the general grounds, the verdict is sustainable also on the theory of abandonment as between the parties. In support of this statement, some further reference to the pleadings and the evidence may be pertinent. The plaintiffs alleged that the plot was appropriated by their grandfather as a private cemetery some time before the year 1815, and that his first wife was buried there during that year. Their grandfather was married a second time, and his second wife was the grandmother of these plaintiffs. The grandfather was buried in this cemetery in 1837, and their grandmother was buried there in 1868. So far as appeared, the plaintiffs had no other relative buried at this place. Only one of the plaintiffs, D. L. Mayes, testified; and he could give no more than the Christian name of one additional person who was buried there. The plaintiffs did not proceed upon the theory that this was a public cemetery, but, as just stated, alleged only that it was appropriated as a private cemetery. There was no claim of dedication to the public. There was no evidence to show that any one of the plaintiffs or other member of the family ever did anything toward care of the graves or maintaining the cemetery as such until after purchase of the land surrounding it by Mr. Felts sometime in- the year 1924. Mr. Mayes testified, however, that a predecessor in title of Mr. Felts did give to the graves some care and attention about thirty years ago. He further testified: “The graves of my grandmother and my father [grandfather] and his first wife were not marked. He was buried between them. There were some stones there — some rocks. The rocks were on the side of the grave. The rocks were about that big [indicating]. My sister, Miss America, was there at the time my grandmother was buried. My mother was there too. My grandfather was dead. Since that time I have been back over there. As to whether there is anything out there where that cemetery lot is to show the boundaries, or about where they were, there was until they were ploughed in. There were sunken down graves there. I did not see *848 anything around the cemetery. Times were quite different then. Anybody can tell now if they go out there; the soil on the cemetery lot is not the same color as the surrounding soil.”

It will be noticed from this statement that according to the witness the only signs of the graves were some “rocks . . on the side of the grave,” inferably only one grave, that of the grandfather; that the earth was “sunken” over these graves; and that the soil on the lot was different from that of surrounding soil. On the other hand, Mrs. Felts and a former tenant or cropper of her husband both gave testimony from which the jury were authorized to find that at the time of purchase of the land by Mr. Felts the place had ceased to bear any sign of these graves or of the existence of the cemetery as such; and one witness testified: “The cemetery was done away with along in 1921 or 1922.” The jury were thus authorized to find that the plot of ground had lost all appearance as a place of burial before the purchase of the land by Mr. Felts, and the evidence as a whole authorized the inference that he purchased the land in good faith and without notice of such cemetery.

As to what will constitute abandonment of a cemetery, the decisions of the several courts that have dealt with the subject do not appear to be in perfect accord. In 10 Am. Jur. 512, § 36, it is stated: “As long as a cemetery is kept and preserved'as a resting place for the dead, with anything to indicate the existence of graves, or as long as it is known and recognized by the public as a graveyard, it is not abandoned. Thus, where the bodies interred in a cemetery remain therein and the spot awakens sacred memories in living persons, the fact that for some years no new interments have been made and that the graves have been neglected does not operate as an abandonment and authorize the desecration of the graves. A cemetery does not lose its character as such merely because further interments in it become impossible, as where further burials are prohibited by ordinance or legislative enactment.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.E.2d 73, 189 Ga. 845, 130 A.L.R. 245, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayes-v-simons-ga-1940.