93 Ga. 300 | Ga. | 1894
Judgment reversed.
The evidence for plaintiffs was as follows : ' A private way has been located across the land for more than seven years, and Frank Thomas and others had used the same uninterruptedly since the time when Thomas acquired the ownership of his place, which was six or eight years ago. The way had been kept in repair, and was not more than fifteen feet wide. Frank Thomas had traveled “ in the old road running parallel to the one ” since he owned the place, there being an old road which had formerly been the road used, and at another place four parallel roads. At one or two places the road was more than fifteen feet wide. There was another road twenty-five or thirty feet long, which he traveled sometimes. The road might have been more than fifteen feet wide in some places, but he was not sure, as he had never measured it, but was certain that it was not more than fifteen feet at any place. Seaborn Thomas had known the road in dispute for more than twenty years. The private way now claimed to have been obstructed had been used uninterruptedly for more than seven years. At one point on the road on Mrs. Follendore’s place there were four roads leading down the hill for twenty-five or thirty yards, but only one of them is now in use, and only one had been in use for the past seven years or longer. He had worked that road, had hauled pine straw to it and kept it in repair. Said private road was his only road to get into or out from his place, and the road proposed by Mrs. Follendore was impracticable on account of the hills. It would be a great expense on him and others to make a road at the place suggested by Mrs. Follendore, as the hills are so numer