180 Ga. 457 | Ga. | 1935
C. S. Gibson and others filed in Glascock superior court a petition against John C. Gibson, Mrs. Mary Wright Gibson, and Mrs. Louise Dunn Gibson. As amended, the petition alleged that W. A. Gibson Sr. died intestate in 1918, in possession of 416 acres, more or less, of described land in the 1169th district G. M. of Glascock County that Mrs. Yan Della Gibson died on December 8, 1922, as owner and in possession of 800 acres, more or less, of described land in the 1169th district G. M. of Glascock County; that W. A. Gibson Sr. and Mrs. Yan Della Gibson were the father and mother of the petitioners and of John C. Gibson, one of the defendants, and of W. A. Gibson Jr., from whose estate the defendant Mrs. Louise Dunn Gibson now holds under a year’s support; that John C. Gibson has conveyed all of his interest in both of the said tracts of land to Mrs. Mary Wright Gibson, and for that
Mrs. Louise Dunn Gibson filed a demurrer on the grounds that the petition did not set out a cause of action; that it did not show any equity, and the plaintiffs had a complete and adequate remedy at lawr and were not entitled to equitable relief; that the petition showed on its face that the superior court of Glascock County had no jurisdiction of the defendant, that the jurisdiction was in the superior court of McDuffie County, and that the petition prayed for no substantial relief against the other defendants who were alleged to be residents of Glascock County; that it did not appear that the estate of W. A. Gibson Sr. had not been disposed of, or that his heirs named in the petition are still entitled to any distributive share thereof, or that the title to said estate is still in the heirs or legal representatives of said W. A. Gibson Sr. There were grounds of special demurrer not passed on. The court rendered judgment reciting that the petitioners had “amended their petition by converting it from an equitable petition for partition to a statutory peti
The petition after amendment was not converted into a cause of action at law. It remained a cause of action in equity for partition under the Code of 1933, § 85-1504 (Code of 1910), § 5358). In Griffin v. Griffin, 153 Ga. 547 (113 S. E. 161), it was held: “Where a tenant in common applies to the superior court to have certain land so held partitioned and to have an accounting between the tenants in common under § 5358 of the Civil Code of 1910, such a proceeding is in the nature of a proceeding in equity in which the court has all the power and jurisdiction for hearing and determining the various matters in dispute between the parties, including their respective titles to the land; to have an accounting for rents and profits, awarding partition, etc.” In the opinion it was stated: “As early as the case of Griffin v. Griffin, 33 Ga. 107, this court held that ‘Upon an application to the superior court for partition of land by joint tenants, or tenants in common, under the act of March 26, 1767, it is proper for that court, in case of a contest, to go into a consideration of the title, both legal and equitable, and award or refuse the writ, according to the proof made.’ In delivering the opinion of the court Lyon, J. said: ‘The proceedings, under that act (1767), for partition of lands, are in the nature of a proceeding at equity, in which the court has all the power and jurisdiction for hearing and determining the various matters in dispute between the parties, in respect to their respective titles, and awarding a partition, according as he shall find the parties entitled, as fully and completely as if it were a bill in chancery for that purpose. If there be a dispute as to the facts, as there is likely to be in a case like this, the court can direct an issue to be made up, and at once tried by a jury.’ ”
In the present case a number of persons are interested, some holding as heirs of the original cotenants, some as purchasers, and one under a judgment for a year’s support; and the petition recites that a quantity of timber has been cut and sold by one or more of the co-tenants, who received stated sums of money in excess of the value of their interest in the land; and it is sought to have these parties account for the money thus received, and to have it set off against the value of the interest possessed by them as cotenants under the
The second headnote need not be elaborated.
Judgment reversed.