Mullis v. Baker., 112 Ga. App. 879, 146 S.E.2d 788 (1965)

Georgia Court Of Appeals

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Whelchel & Whelchel, Hoyt H. Whelchel, Jr., for appellee.Edward Parrish, S. B. McCall, for appellant.

The verdict for the protestant in a processioning proceeding was authorized by evidence from which the jury could find that the line found by the processioners was not authorized.

On December 15, 1964, Mildred F. Mullis filed an application in the court of ordinary directed to the processioners of the 1184th District, G. M., of Colquitt County, asking that the boundary line between her property and that of R. R. Baker, adjacent property owner on the west, be surveyed and marked anew. After notice to Baker a day was set for the proceedings, on which day the processioners and the surveyor surveyed said line, finding it to be the original land lot line as shown by a survey and plat made by A. D. Ross on December 8, 1933, and as contended by the applicant. Baker filed a protest to the return of the processioners, alleging that the true line is approximately 82 yards east of the line found by the processioners, that said true line is marked by an existing fence which was erected by the applicant with the assistance of the protestant and that said line had been treated by the parties as the true line since 1943. The issue thus raised was tried before a jury in the Superior Court of Colquitt County, resulting in a verdict in favor of the protestant. The applicant filed a motion for a new trial on the general grounds, the denial of which is assigned as error.

"Processioners only have jurisdiction and authority to ascertain and mark anew old lines which have previously been designated on the surface of the earth. They cannot set up a line otherwise. They cannot set up a line merely shown in a deed or plat, or a compromise line not designated on the earth's surface. Accordingly, a line sought to be set up by processioners from a deed or plat or both, and partially by arbitrary selection of arbitrary and unmarked lines, corners and termini, [is] unauthorized." Anthony v. Wright, 112 Ga. App. 71 (143 SE2d 779). There was evidence in the present case that the processioners and the surveyor took an old plat made by A. D. Ross, which was excluded from evidence on timely objection, and began at a fence corner on the northeast side of lands of Mrs. Mullis and measured west the distance shown on the plat in order to find the line which they established. While there may have been some evidence that they were marking anew an old line, in that they found a tree with the remnants of barbed wire imbedded in it and a stump with what could have been a blaze on it, there was also evidence that the marks on the cypress tree were such that they could have been put there by nature or by man. Further, the surveyor testified that the wire in the tree was adjacent to an old roadbed and there could have been a fence along the old road. There was, additionally, evidence that the protestant had put up a fence in 1948 with the help of the applicant's husband, that the two had agreed that that was approximately the property line between them, that the protestant had sold off timber and stumps and turpentined trees down to approximately where the fence was with no complaint from the applicant, that the applicant had seen what was going on ever since the fence was erected, that she and her husband had ceased cutting and turpentining timber when the protestant bought the adjoining land, and that she and her husband had never crossed the fence since it had been erected.

Mildred F. Mullis" was, therefore, merely to establish that the line as found by the processioners was not authorized. The verdict being supported by competent evidence, the court did not err in its judgment overruling the motion for a new trial on the general grounds.

Judgment affirmed. Jordan and Deen, JJ., concur.

1965

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