Rattaree v. Morrow
This text of 71 Ga. 528 (Rattaree v. Morrow) 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.
Opinion
The petitioner for the processioning asked that the lines around the tract of land in his district be surveyed and marked anew ; the protestant was only notified, and was present at the processioning, and made no objection, then or afterward, because the lines around the entire tract were not run, and because only one of these lines was surveyed and marked anew, this being the line that separated his lands from the applicant’s. The plat made out and returned by the surveyor is certified to be a true representation of the lines between applicant and protestant, while [531]*531the report of the processioners shows that they only surveyed and marked one line, that which divided the lands of applicant and protestant. The protest set up that this was not the true line, but another one was, which was therein pointed out. On the trial Of this issue, there was much conflicting evidence, and the jury, as we have said before, found in favor of the line surveyed and marked anew by the processioners. The court admitted the surveyor’s plat over the objection of protestant, but rejected the report of the processioners, on his objection, upon the ground that this was not properly returned to the court; that the surveyor’s plat alone was properly returned, and that alone was prima facie evidence under the statute. We think this latter ruling was erroneous ; that both are necessary parts of the proceeding; and that one is incomplete without the other, is apparent from. §2392 of the Code, which requires the processioners to make a return of their acts, together with the plat of the surveyor, to the ordinary of the county, to be kept of file in his office, when taken in connection with Code, §2390, which provides for the making and filing of a protest by the owner of adjoining lands to the lines as run by the processioners and surveyor, and for the return of the proceedings, together with the protest, to the superior court for trial.
It is true, as contended by protestant, that it is the surveyor’s duty to make out and certify a plat of the lines, etc., and to deliver a copy thereof to the applicant, which, in all future disputes arising in respect to the boundary lines of the tract, with any owner of adjoining lands, having notice of the processioning, would be deemed prima facie correct and admissible in evidence without further proof. Code, §2386. Whether the rule of evidence provided for under this section obtains on the trial of the issue made by the protest, may admit of doubt; but the entire proceeding duly returned is in the nature of a judgment, and is prima facie binding until set aside, and under that view is admissible in evidence to shift the onus, and if not success-
[532]*532fully assailed, or acquiesced in, would, it seems to us, be conclusive to the extent of its legal force and effect. This error of the court, in rejecting the return of the processioners, is one, however, of which the protestant cannot avail himself, since it was made on his own motion. It is also true that the protest may be amended at any stage of the cause, and it may be that, if the return of the processioners, including the plat of the surveyor, showed a failure to comply -with the law, in not ascertaining the boundaries of the entire tract, and marking them, that the court would have no jurisdiction to take further cognizance of the case. ( Watson vs. Bishop, 69 Ga , 51, 54.) Yet such is not the case here; the want of these jurisdictional facts, if such they be, is not apparent upon the face of these proceedings. The conduct of this protestant throughout the trial, and indeed the entire proceeding, until the case reached this court, would imply strongly their existence; surely, he cannot be permitted to try the experiment of obtaining a verdict in his favor, and holding back, this controlling point in the event of his failure, to make use of it to defeat and overthrow his adversary. This would be to trifle with the process of the law, and to try before this court questions waived in the lower court,, and not passed upon in the trial of the cause. There is nothing upon which error can be assigned here; it is the judgment, ruling, or decision alone of that court, that can be reviewed here, upon a specification of errors distinctly alleged.
Judgment affirmed.
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