Stewart v. Latimer

30 S.E.2d 633, 197 Ga. 735
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 8, 1944
Docket14835, 14844.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 30 S.E.2d 633 (Stewart v. Latimer) 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
Stewart v. Latimer, 30 S.E.2d 633, 197 Ga. 735 (Ga. 1944).

Opinion

Bell, Chief Justice.

The court erred in not sustaining the defendants’ motions to disallow paragraph Á-1 of the amendment, in which the plaintiffs alleged they withdrew “any and all parts of said petition which asks that the following deeds be reformed,” referring to the deeds from Mrs. Stewart to Citizens Building & Loan Association and from the successor association to the defendant Latimer. The objection urged in each motion was that this part of the amendment was too vague and indefinite, as to what parts of the petition the plaintiffs intended to strike. The original petition contained several allegations as to what the parties intended in executing and accepting the deeds in question. These averments might be relevant and proper in a suit to reform, and the plaintiffs might have considered them appropriate in seeking merely to recover the land. They did strike their specific prayer for reformation, but it could not be determined with reasonable certainty whether they intended to strike or leave the original allegations as to mere intention. A similar situation arose in Funk v. Browne, 145 Ga. 828 (4) (90 S. E. 64), where the plaintiffs amended their petition by striking therefrom “ all, and as much, of the allegations” in four stated paragraphs as related to one of the two defendants. There was no objection to the allowance of the amendment, but after it was allowed there was a special demurrer to the amended paragraphs, on the ground that they did not set forth plainly, fully, and distinctly the plaintiff’s complaint. This court said: “It was not a proper mode of amendment in general terms to strike so much of the allegations of the paragraphs as related to one of the defendants, without pointing them out, and leave the court and the adverse party uncertain as to what was withdrawn by the amendment. Such a method of amendment opened those paragraphs to special demurrer.” In the instant case, however, we have omitted from the foregoing statement only those allegations of the original petition which specifically referred to reformation, and will thus give the plaintiff the benefit of the doubt as to all other averments, in considering the petition as amended. We may do this in the present case, for the reason that, in any view of this matter, it is our opinion that the petition as amended did *741 not state a cause of action, and the procedure we thus .adopt; can hot be harmful to any of the parties. . ' .

The court erred in not sustaining the general demurrers to the petition as amended. As to this question, the case depends, ih the main upon the construction of the deed of April 26, 1933, fr.om Mrs. Lula Stewart to Citizens Building & Loan Association; -the description in that deed and in the deed from Citizens Federal Savings & Loan Association, successor corporation, to the defendant Latimer being identical. The deed from Mrs. Stewart described the property as follows: All that tract of land in what is known as .Summerville Park, and now in the fourth ward of the City of Rome, Floyd County, Georgia, and being described as '‘“beginning at a point 216 feet, east of the southeast corner of lot No. 6 of the City Land Company’s Addition to Summerville .Park, shown on the map of said addition recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of Floyd County, Georgia, in plat book .1, page 157, and from said point running along the northerly side of Oakwood Street 100 feet to the east side of a culvert; thence northerly 178 feet, more or less, to the line of the Orr property; thence in a westerly direction along the line of the Orr property 100 feet; thence in a southerly direction 178 feet, more or less, to the beginning point on Oakwood Street; being a lot 100 feet wide off the easterly side of the property described in a security deed from Mrs. Lula Stewart to Citizens Building & Loan Association, recorded in deed book 142, page 294.”

It will thus be seen that the south line .of the property was described as beginning at a point 216 feet east of the southeast corner of lot 6 as shown upon a recorded map, and from said .point running along the northerly side of Oakwood Street 100 feet'to the east side of a culvert. Where a deed thus describes a line a$ beginning at a point to be ascertained .by measuring a certain distance from a: designated corner as shown upon a map, and running thence -to' another point which is stated as the east side of a culvert, the line so described as running from one fixed point to another will ordinarily control, regardless of what the deed may state as the distance between such points. In Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Hamilton, 59 Ga. 171, it was held: “When a deed, referring to a plat annexed thereto, shows that the land conveyed was bounded on one 'side by a street, and on the other by the right-of-way of *742 the plaintiff, the land conveyed by the plaintiff to the defendant in such deed prima facie extends only from the street to the right-of-way, though the plat had five hundred feet written thereon as the distance from the street to the right-of-way, and though the distance between the two points was less than five hundred feet.” In Brantly v. Huff, 62 Ga. 532, it was held that in tracing boundaries, courses and distances yield to permanent physical monuments, natural or artificial; and in the opinion it was said that “courses and distances are among the lowest indicia of boundary — not the highest.” To the same effect, see Riley v. Griffin, 16 Ga. 141 (7, 11) (60 Am. D. 726). In Harris v. Hull, 70 Ga. 831, it was held: “What is most material and most certain in a description shall prevail over that which is less material and less certain. Courses and distances and computed contents yield to ascertained boundaries and monuments.” In the opinion, it was stated that it seems to be the universal rule that courses and distances must yield to natural, visible, and ascertained objects, and that the rule rpsts upon the presumption that all grants and conveyances are made with reference to an actual view of the premises by the parties. In Leverett v. Bullard, 121 Ga. 534 (2) (49 S. E. 591), it was said that, “Whenever in a conveyance the deed refers to monuments actually erected as the boundaries of the land, it is well settled that these monuments must prevail, whatever mistakes the deed may contain as to courses and distances.”

It appears from the petition that the deed described the southern boundary line ah being 100 feet in length, but that it was. after-wards found to be 118 feet. The plaintiffs claim the advantage of the difference, saying that the deed should be construed to convey a tract of only 100 feet off the east side of the larger tract which had been conveyed to Mrs. Stewart by Mrs. Vassiere. What would the plaintiffs have said, however, if the distance had been found to be 82 feet, or some other number of feet less than 100, as stated in the deed? In that case, it seems that, as to the-quantity of land conveyed, the grantee would have been bound by the definitely marked or described termini, and thus would have acquired a tract less than 100 feet in width despite the incorrect statement as to the length of such boundary line. Haley v. Ray, 142 Ga.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E.2d 633, 197 Ga. 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-latimer-ga-1944.