McCollum v. Thomason

122 S.E. 800, 32 Ga. App. 160, 1924 Ga. App. LEXIS 320
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 23, 1924
Docket15231, 15232
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 800 (McCollum v. Thomason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCollum v. Thomason, 122 S.E. 800, 32 Ga. App. 160, 1924 Ga. App. LEXIS 320 (Ga. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Bell, J.

1. Under the Civil Code, § 3823, a landowner dissatisfied with a line run and marked by processioners and a surveyor between him and a coterminus owner may file his protest thereto, specifying his objection and the true line as claimed by him, and the papers, including the protest, shall be returned to the superior court for trial. The verdict and the judgment shall be framed to meet the issue tried and decided. The issue in such a case is not necessarily confined to the question of whether the line as marked by the processioners should be sustained, but it is permissible for the protestant to obtain a verdict setting up the true line as declared in his protest, if the evidence shall so warrant. See Stewart v. Jackson, 144 Ga. 501 (3) (87 S. E. 656); Parrish v. [161]*161Castleberry, 142 Ga. 115 (6) (82 S. E. 520); Norman v. Smith, 131 Ga. 69 (4), 74 (61 S. E. 1039); Robson v. Shelnutt, 122 Ga. 322 (50 S. E. 91); Civil Code (1910), §§ 4522, 5426.

2. In this processioning case the protestant specified his objection to the line marked by the processioners and the surveyor, and also set out what he contended was the true dividing line. No other issues were raised in the protest. The court instructed the jury as follows: (1) “Under the law, processioners with a surveyor can’t make a new line, but only reestablish and remark old lines. . . If you find that the proeessioners made a line where there has been no line before, made a new line . . , that would be an end to the case, and the form of your verdict would be. . , ‘We, the jury, find that the processioners made a new line,’ and on that I would dismiss the whole proceedings.” (2) “If you find that the processioners remarked a line that had-already been made , . . then find out whether or not that is the true line. . . In that event the form of your verdict would be, ‘We, the jury, find in favor of the line established by the processioners.’ ” (3) “If you find that the line established by the processioners is not the true line, but that the line claimed by protestant . . is the true line, then your finding would be, ‘We, the jury, find in favor of the line claimed by the protestant as the correct line.’, ” The jury found a verdict “in favor of the protestant.” Eeld: Verdicts are to be upheld if capable of legal intendment. They will be construed in the light of the pleadings, the issue made by the evidence, and the charge of the court. Tifton &c. Ry. Co. v. Butler, 4 Ga. App. 191 (2), 193 (60 S. E. 1087); Barbour v. State, 8 Ga. App. 27 (68 S. E. 458); McNeil v. McNeil, 147 Ga. 25 (3) (92 S. E. 644). Applying this ruling, the verdict in this case was properly construed by the trial judge as a finding in favor of the line alleged in the protest to be the true line, and it was not improper for the judge thereupon to enter a judgment or decree accordingly, provided the alleged true line was sufficiently definite.

3. Where in a processioning case the return of the processioners, with the plat made by the surveyor, described the line as run by them across lot of land number 180 in the 3d district of a named county, as follows: “ Commencing in the center of Brasstown creek, which commencing point is evidenced by a rock corner between the lands of L. A. Thomas, G. W. McCollum, and R. C. McCollum, standing on the west bank of said Brass-town creek; thence south 76.15 west 24 rods to a plainly marked white oak tree, marked as a center tree; thence south 76.45 west. 9 rods to a plainly marked white oak tree, marked as a center tree; thence south 80. west 42 rods and 15 links to a rock corner between said L. A. Thomas, Mrs. Emma Tatum, and R. C. McCollum,” and where the protest to such line described the true line as one “beginning at a hickory corner on the original line between lots Nos. 179 and 180 in the 3d land district and runs thence S. 82.15, 204 rods and 30 links, straight through said lot No. 180, to a post oak conditional corner on the original line between lots Nos. 180 and 181,” and alleged further “that said hickory and said post oak are and have been recognized and established as the corners for over seventy years and were so recognized by the said predecessor in title of the [coterminus owner], and this protestant has been in actual, peaceable, and uninterrupted possession [162]*162of said land up to said straight line for a period of over twenty-seven years, and has cultivated same uninterruptedly for that period, [and that] said proeessioners refused to recognize said established post oak corner, but ran their line to a point some twenty rods below same and some twenty rods down on the lands of this protestant, which is the south half of said lot No. 180,” such allegation as to the “true line,” when considered in connection with the return of the proeessioners with the plat thereto annexed, which are a part of the record, are not too vague and uncertain to authorize a verdict and decree thereon, there being extrinsic proof of the physical existence of the termini marks in accordance with the allegations. Callaway v. Beauchamp, 147 Ga. 17 (2) (92 S. E. 538); McNeil v. McNeil, 147 Ga. 25 (2) (92 S. E. 644). If the corners are established and the lines not marked, a straight line as required by the plat should be run. Civil Code (1910), § 3820. Upon ascertaining the location of either terminus as alleged in the protest, the course of the line toward the other terminus being shown, the latter could be also determined. That is certain which may be made certain. In such a ease the line is sufficiently definite, where, as here, a key to the identification, is shown in the record. Price v. Gross, 148 Ga. 137 (2) (96 S. E. 4); Boyd v. Sanders, 148 Ga. 839 (1) (98 S. E. 490).

4. The verdict in favor of the protestant was not void because of the absence of any prayer in the protest that the alleged true line be found and decreed to be such. If such prayer ought to have been made, the omission might have been supplied by amendment, and the defect, being such as to be cured by verdict and judgment, was not a good ground of a subsequent motion for a new trial or of a motion in arrest of judgment. Civil Code (1910), § 5960; Fitzpatrick v. Paulding, 131 Ga. 693 (63 S. E. 213); Dinkler v. Baer, 92 Ga. 432 (1) (17 S. E. 953); Napier v. Strong, 19 Ga. App. 401 (2) (91 S. E. 579).

5. The evidence in this case did not demand a finding in favor of the line as run and marked by the proeessioners, nor was it conclusively established that previous owners of the adjoining tracts had by agreement fixed a different line from that alleged by the protestant to be the true line. The agreement relied on, which was in writing made in 1889,— after reciting that some of the marks were about to disappear by the death and decay of the timber, — stipulated that the parties thereto “agreed . . to set up rocks in their places, the first one to be set up at the conditional corner on the east end of said line in place of a hickory, . .

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 800, 32 Ga. App. 160, 1924 Ga. App. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccollum-v-thomason-gactapp-1924.