Morgan v. Baxter & Co.

38 S.E. 411, 113 Ga. 144, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 28, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 411 (Morgan v. Baxter & Co.) 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
Morgan v. Baxter & Co., 38 S.E. 411, 113 Ga. 144, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 188 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Fish, J.

J. L. Morgan sought to enjoin Baxter & Company and their agents from cutting and removing, for sawmill purposes and railroad ties, the timber from certain lands in Clinch county. The title upon which the plaintiff relied was adverse possession of the lands under written evidence of title for more than seven years, and an abstract of the deeds constituting such written evidence of title was attached to the petition. The petition alleged that plaintiff, in March, 1890, leased to Paxton & Mattox the timber suitable for sawmill purposes, etc., on the lands in question; that subsequently the receivers of Paxton & Mattox sold their rights under the lease to Craig & Co., who in turn conveyed the same to the defendants; that the lease- was to continue for ten years from the time the lessees or their assigns should commence to cut and remove the timber from the land; that it had expired before the petition in the present case was filed; and that the right to cut and remove the timber was claimed by the defendants under such lease. As to the damages being irreparable, the petition alleged that the defendants were cutting and removing the timber from the land, “to the great and irreparable injury and damage of your petitioner in the sum of five thousand dollars or other large sum,” and, again, “to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of five hundred dollars per lot or other large sum; ” and there was a prayer that on the final trial “the petitioner be allowed such damages as he may be able to show to the jury he has sustained.” The only reference made in the petition to the insolvency of the defendants was: “Your petitioner’s title being perfect, and he having no remedy at common law, the defendants, as he believes, being insolvent, he prays,” etc. It was alleged that all of the defendants' were non-residents of the State. The defendants demurred to the petition, upon the grounds: (1) “That the plaintiff fails to show by his petition a perfect title to the land mentioned in said petition, or to the timber situated thereon.” (2) “ Because the plaintiff fails to attach to his petition an abstract of his title, stating the name of the grantor and grantee, the date, consideration, and description of property, names of wit[146]*146nesses, and when and where recorded.” (3) “ Because the plaintiff states no fact and makes no allegation that could entitle him to the relief prayed for by him.” The defendants filed an answer in which they admitted the making of the lease by the plaintiff, the terms thereof, and the transfers of the rights of the lessees thereunder, as charged in the petition, but denied that plaintiff was owner of the land, and also denied that defendants were insolvent and that the damage would be irreparable. The court refused to grant an interlocutory injunction, and the plaintiff excepted. The bill of exceptions states that the hearing was had on the pleadings and evidence submitted by the plaintiff, and that upon the hearing counsel for defendants admitted that the limitation in the lease from plaintiff to Paxton & Mattox had expired prior to the institution of plaintiff’s suit, and that when the petition was filed defendants were cutting and removing the timber from the land, hut that it was expressly denied that the defendants held the timber or any interest therein under the plaintiff. The evidence submitted in behalf of the plaintiff tended to show that he had title, by prescription, to all the land in question, except two lots, as to which there was no evidence that the plaintiff had any interest in them or the timber thereon. There was also evidence that the defendants were non-residents of the State. There was no evidence as to the insolvency of the defendants, or that the damage would be irreparable. The only points referred to in the brief for plaintiff in error — there having been no oral argument — are: that plaintiff showed a perfect title to the land; that defendants were committing a trespass as charged; and that they were non-residents of the State.'

1. Section 4927 of the Civil Code, as amended by the act of Dec. 20,1899 (Acts 1899, p. 39),provides: “ In all applications to enjoin the cutting of timber for sawmill purposes, and railroad ties,” etc., “it shall not be necessary to aver or prove insolvency or that the damages will be irreparable: provided, the petitioner has perfect title to the land upon which the timber is situated, or who has perfect title to the timber upon any lands, and shall attach an abstract of his title, stating name of grantor and grantee, date, consideration, and description of property, names of witnesses, when and where recorded, to his petition, and produce the original titles before the judge,” etc. . It is clear that, according to the interpretation given to this section by the previous decisions of this court, the plaintiff [147]*147failed to bring bis case within its provisions. In Dixon v. Monroe, 112 Ga. 158, it was held: “ 1. The ‘perfect title’ which will, under section 4927 of the Civil Code, relieve an applicant for injunction from averring and proving insolvency of the defendant, or that the threatened damage will be irreparable, or other circumstances, rendering the interposition of the writ necessary and proper, must be a duly executed paper title, consisting entirely of papers capable of being recorded. 2. If the papers produced under the requirements of the section above referred to do not upon their face show both ‘ the right of possession ’ and ‘ the right of property ’ in the applicant for injunction, parol evidence is not admissible for the purpose of curing the defects.” The court cited the decisions rendered in Wilcox Dumber Co. v. Bullock, 109 Ga. 532, and Camp v. Dixon, 111 Ga. 674. It was held in Jenkins v. Carmen, 112 Ga. 476, that “An equitable petition to enjoin the cutting of timber is not maintainable, under the provisions of section 4927 of the Civil Code, when the plaintiff’s claim of ‘perfect title’ depends upon an allegation that he and the defendant hold under a common grantor, as the truth of such an allegation can not, in the nature of things, appear upon the face of the deeds or other instruments constituting ‘ the original titles,’ the existence of which must appear from the allegations of the petition, and which the plaintiff must produce to the judge, but necessarily rests upon aliunde proof.” The papers exhibited by the plaintiff in the present case did not show upon their face either “the right of possession” or “the right of property,” whereas it was necessary that they should show both of these requisites to escape the application of the general rule that equity will not interpose to restrain a trespass unless the injury be irreparable in damages or the trespasser be insolvent.

2. The question of irreparable damage is not in this case. Even if the allegations of the petition could be considered as” charging that the damage would be irreparable, the answer expressly denied it, and there was no evidence submitted to sustain the charge; moreover, the point is not referred to in the brief for the plaintiff in error. There was positive evidence requiring a finding that all the defendants were non-residents of the State. Indeed, there was no denial of the charge of non-residence, except as to one of the defendants, E. C. Long, and that was an equivocal averment in the answer that he “ has and maintains a legal residence at the Hotel [148]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 411, 113 Ga. 144, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-baxter-co-ga-1901.