Rogers v. Beavers

45 S.E.2d 74, 76 Ga. App. 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 29, 1947
Docket31790, 31806.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 S.E.2d 74 (Rogers v. Beavers) 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
Rogers v. Beavers, 45 S.E.2d 74, 76 Ga. App. 16 (Ga. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

1. Though the evidence of the trial of a processioning proceeding under Chapter 85-16 of the Code is not sufficient to authorize the establishment of the line between coterminous owners of adjacent land lots as located by the processioners, yet it is error to dismiss the entire proceeding on the ground that it is the province of the processioners to survey and mark anew established lines as they actually exist, and because they are without authority to run a new line, where the evidence as a whole authorizes the jury to establish such dividing line other than as located by the processioners.

2. Refusal to direct a verdict is not error in any case. Roper Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Faver, 8 Ga. App. 178 (1) (68 S.E. 883); Kelly v. Strouse, 116 Ga. 872 (43 S.E. 280); Western Atlantic Railroad v. Michael, 178 Ga. 1 (172 S.E. 66); Coastal News Co. v. Jacksonville Paper Co., 66 Ga. App. 228 (17 S.E.2d 760).

DECIDED OCTOBER 29, 1947.
On May 6, 1947, Marvin E. Rogers filed an application with the processioners of land of the 1013th District G. M., Murray County, alleging that he is the owner of lots of land numbers 231 and 232 in the 26th District and 2nd Section of said county, said two lots containing 160 acres each, more or less, and lying *Page 17 and being in the militia district to which reference is herein made, and applying for the survey and marking anew of the north and south line on the west side of said lots, he contending in his application that this boundary line of his property is the original line. In his application he names as owners of adjoining lands several persons including Mrs. Cornelia Beavers, the protestant. On May 7, the processioners of land to whom this application was made, notified all adjoining landowners including protestant that "Marvin E. Rogers, the owner of lots of land numbers 231 and 232 in the 26th District G. M., said county, having applied to us to have the original lines of west side of said two lots of land surveyed and marked anew, are hereby notified that we have appointed the 20th of May, 1947 at 8 a. m., as the time when we or a majority of us, with the county surveyor, Mr. Jim Springfield, will trace and mark said lines." At the appointed time the three processioners and the county surveyor proceeded to locate, survey and mark anew, a north and south line insisted by them and the applicant to be the original west line of said two lots of land, lot 231 lying immediately south of lot 232. On June 7, the processioners filed their return with the ordinary, in which they reported that pursuant to the application of Marvin E. Rogers and after notice referred to herein they proceeded to trace and mark anew the original north and south lines on the west side of lots 231 and 232. With this return they filed a plat showing north and south tier of lots beginning with lot 232 at the north end of said plat and southward in order there appear lot numbers 231, 230, 229 and 228; also on said plat is another tier of lots adjacent to and west of the tier of lots first referred to, beginning at the north of lot 237 and southward in order there appear 238, 239, 240 and 241; hence lots 232 and 231 are adjacent to and east of lots 237 and 238. On July 2, Cornelia Beavers, the protestant, filed with the ordinary her protest in writing. On the same day this paper was turned over to the clerk of the superior court and filed in his office. In her protest she contends that the line as run by the processioners along her property, she contending that she owns lots 237 and 238 which are located as before pointed out immediately west of lots 232 and 231, is not the true line dividing her property and that of the applicant; but on the contrary, she contends that the *Page 18 true line is 300 yards east of the line as run by the processioners, and begins on the south boundary of lots 238 and 231 at a locust post corner, running thence north to a rock cliff corner, and thence continuing north to a chestnut-oak tree on the north boundary of lots 237 and 232. The papers were returned by the ordinary to the clerk of the superior court and by him entered upon the issue docket for the August term of the superior court of said county. The cause came on for hearing before a jury in the superior court on August 14, at which time the protestant filed an amendment contending further "that the processioners and surveyor ignored their contentions and claims as to the location of the true line, and without considering the question of occupancy and possession of said premises and without hearing any evidence relative to these claims, established a line beginning at a corner known as the Government corner, and running due south along what the processioners and the surveyor found to be the original line between the lots of land belonging to these parties." Counsel for the applicant introduced the entire processioning proceedings, including the application, notice to the protestant, certificate of the surveyor, the plat and the return of the processioners together with all entries thereon, and rested. Thereupon the protestant put up a number of witnesses, the first of whom was the protestant herself, Mrs. Cornelia Beavers, who testified in substance: That she lives on lot of land number 238, she has another lot up there number 237, north of lot number 238; she has been living there since 1911; she married an heir to this place, Lucius Beavers; she bought both heirs out, first her brother-in-law, John Beavers about 24 years ago, and later she bought her husband out; that she has always known and recognized the dividing line between lots 232 and 231 on the east and 237 and 238 on the west, to be marked by a Spanish oak at the southeast corner of 238 (which point also is the southwest corner of lot 231 and constitutes the southern end of the line in question according to protestant's contention), the middle corner (southeast corner of 237 and southwest corner of 232 according to protestant's contentions) is marked by a rock cliff, and the next corner (northeast corner of 237 and northwest corner of 232 which is the north end of the line in question as contended by protestant) is marked by a *Page 19 chestnut tree; that John Gregory, now deceased, was a former owner of lots 232 and 231 now owned by the applicant and that he recognized and acquiesced in the line as contended by protestant; that on one occasion when he was selling timber off his property, he pointed out the rock cliff as one of the corners in question; also that Ash Bates once owned the upper lot of Mr. Rogers' (lot 232), and that he recognized the line as contended by protestant. That her husband and brother-in-law who were raised on the property knew the line as contended by her. She also testified that the timber had been sold from her lots three different times, and each time was cut up to the line as contended by her; the first time it was sold by Mother Beavers to Chip Owens, in 1909; later in 1920 to 1924, to W. B. Farrar by John Beavers; then she sold to Evans of the Crandell Lumber Company who are now cutting the timber. She also testified that this line had previously been run by other persons not parties to this proceeding and found to be as contended by her.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.E.2d 74, 76 Ga. App. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-beavers-gactapp-1947.