Pearre v. Wilkinson

188 S.E. 553, 54 Ga. App. 638, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 720
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 27, 1936
Docket25548
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 188 S.E. 553 (Pearre v. Wilkinson) 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
Pearre v. Wilkinson, 188 S.E. 553, 54 Ga. App. 638, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 720 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

George E. Wilkinson filed with the processioners of the 123rd district of Richmond County, a petition to have the lines around his land surveyed and marked anew, and particularly the northern line thereof, this being the line between his tract and the lands of C. Clifford Rosier, Mrs. Ollie Pearl Beck, J. H. Poarre, and Freeman S. Rosier, these and others being named as the adjoining landowners. The processioners, together with the county surveyor, made their survey, and the processioners filed their return in accordance with the statute, the same showing that the adjoining landowners were given the required written notice, a plat of their survey certified by the surveyor being attached to their return. The survey and return were made under date of May 26, 1932, the date of the application therefor being May 9, 1932, a copy of which was attached to the return. Within the time allowed by law, Mrs. Beck, C. Clifford Rosier, and J. H. Pearre filed separate protests to the return of the processioners. Mrs. Beck alleged that the processioners and the surveyor started at an old mill-dam and undertook to trace and mark anew the line in question by fixing the high-water mark of the old mill-pond, which had not been in existence for more than twenty-five years; that the marked line went out on her land some fifty feet beyond where the waters of the old pond ever came; that the line so marked is not the true line, but Butler’s Creek is the true line; that she and her predecessors had been in actual, exclusive, open, and notorious possession of the land down to the run of Butler’s Creek for more than twenty-five years, but the processioners and [640]*640surveyor took no notice of her possession in running the line; and that the processioners were not present' when the surveyor made the markings as shown on the plat as filed, and had not seen the markings at the time they filed their report. The protests of C. Clifford Rosier and J. H. Pearre were practically the same as that of Mrs. Beck, except that Rosier alleged that Butler’s Creek had been established as the dividing line between him and Wilkinson and their predecessors in title by acts and declarations for more than twenty-five years, and that the creek had been acquiesced in as the line for more than seven years. J. H. Pearre in his protest referred to himself as the owner of the Pearre tract of land adjacent to the line in question, but some months later he filed an amendment alleging that he and his six minor children were owners and tenants in common of this tract, and that these minor children had not been served with notice of the processioning proceeding as required by law. When the case was called for trial the protestants moved to dismiss the proceeding, for failure to give the minor children notice as required by law. The case was continued at Wilkinson’s request; and he filed a petition alleging that the Pearre tract of land was conveyed to Mrs. Margaret Cornelia Pearre, who died before the survey, leaving J. H. Pearre and the six minor children as her heirs; that these children knew of, and one of them attended, the survey; that there had been no administration of the deceased’s estate; and that the minors had no guardian. He prayed that J. H. Pearre and C. Clifford Rosier be appointed guardians ad litem for the minors, and that the minors be made parties. To this petition, Pearre and Rosier filed demurrers on the ground that no cause of action was set out, and on certain special grounds, which were met by amendment. The demurrers -were overruled. They filed also an answer. After due notice to show cause why they should not be appointed, the court appointed Pearre and Rosier guardians ad litem for the minors, and made the minors parties to the case. To the judgments overruling their demurrers, appointing them guardians ad litem, and naming the minors parties, J. H. Pearre and O. Clifford Rosier excepted pendente lite. When the case was called for trial at a later term, the protestants made a motion to dismiss the processioning proceeding, on the ground that the minors as adjacent landowners had not been notified. The trial resulted in a verdict [641]*641in favor of Wilkinson. The protestants’ motion for new trial was overruled. They excepted to that judgment and to the orders overruling the demurrers and the motion to dismiss, and appointing guardians ad litem and making the minors parties.

It is provided in the Code, § 85-1605, that in a proceeding to procession land lines, “ten days written notice of the time of such running and marking shall be given to all the owners of adjoining lands, if resident within this State; and the processioners shall not proceed to run and mark such lines until satisfactory evidence of the service of such notice shall be produced to them,” and in § 85-1606, that “It shall be the duty of the county surveyor, with the processioners, taking all due precaution to arrive at the true lines, to trace out and plainly mark the same. The surveyor shall make out and certify a plat of the same, and deliver a copy thereof to the applicant; and in all future disputes arising in reference to the boundary lines of such tract, with any owner of adjoining lands, having due notice of such processioning, such plat and the lines so marked shall be prima facie correct, and such plat, certified as aforesaid, shall be admissible in evidence without further proof.” So it would seem that failure to give an adjoining landowner notice as required by law would not work a dismissal of the proceeding as to the adjoining landowners who had been given the required notice, but that such proceeding would not be binding on an owner not having due notice thereof. After the motion to dismiss because the minor children of J. H. Pearre were not given written notice of the time and place of the survey as required by law, the applicant filed a petition alleging that the minors knew of the survey, and one of them went along with the surveyor and processioners; that their father, J. H. Pearre, and their uncle, C. Clifford Eosier, were notified and were present during the survey; that while the line was being run Eosier stated that he represented these minor children; and that the applicant asked that Pearre and Eosier be appointed guardians ad litem for the minors in the proceeding then before the court, and that the minors be made parties. The court appointed guardians ad litem, after rule nisi and proper notice, and the minors were made parties. This was error. The minors were not given written notice of the processioning proceeding. If present at the time and place of the survey, they could hot legally act for them[642]*642selves. Nor were they represented by any one present who could legally act for them. Therefore they could not, over objection, be made parties to the proceeding on appeal to the superior court. However, this would not work a dismissal of the entire proceeding, but the effect would be that the proceeding and the judgment thereon would not be binding on these minors. In Cartledge v. Ashford, 152 Ga. 674 (110 S. E. 907), where the husband and wife were joint owners of the land, and due notice was served on the wife as an adjoining landowner, though not on the husband, but he was present and protested against the legality of the proceeding when the line was run, and was afterward present and testified in the superior court on the issue formed by the protest filed by his wife to the return of the processioners, it was held that the husband was bound by that proceeding and the judgment therein, because he could have filed a protest or intervened on the trial of the issue, had he so desired.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.E. 553, 54 Ga. App. 638, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearre-v-wilkinson-gactapp-1936.