144 Ga. 688 | Ga. | 1916
1. Where an owner of lands dedicates the same to public use, either expressly or by his acts, and the public enters into possession and uses such land in pursuance thereof for such a length of time that the public accommodation or private rights may be materially affected by an interruption of the enjoyment thereof, the dedicator can not afterwards appropriate such land, to private use. Civil Code (1910), § 4171.
2. Accordingly, where in pursuance of a- movement by the citizens of a school district, to secure land upon which to erect a schoolhouse for the benefit of the citizens of the district, certain owners of land situated within the district consented to and did give the people of the district one acre of land off the east side of a certain lot in the district, upon condition that the people of the district would erect a public-school building thereon, and that then the possession of the schoolhouse and land should be delivered to and become the property of the county board of education, and the real estate should remain such as long as it was used for the purpose of educating the children of the district under the supervision of the public-school authorities of the district and county, and the dedicators agreed to execute a deed to the land within a reasonable time; and where, after the acre of land was so given and donated for such purpose, the people of the school district, acting on the agreement of the dedicators, did erect upon the land dedicated a public-school building at a cost of three hundred dollars, and after it was erected it was taken in charge by the public-school authorities of the district and county, and a public-school was taught in such school building in the year 1908 and subsequently until the filing of the present suit (March 17, 1913) ; and where, at the time the site for the school building was located, one of the dedicators laid off with a tape-line the acre of land upon which the school house was erected, and which is described in the petition more particu