150 Ga. 289 | Ga. | 1920
This was an action for land. The ease involved the location of a division line. The plaintiffs and the defendant were owners of adjoining land. In 1916 the line between the two tracts was indefinite and unascertained. The plaintiffs and the defendant’s predecessor in title called in the surveyor to establish the line. Upon the trial the surveyor testified: “I did not undertake to ascertain the line, but run a straight line as it was agreed upon by the parties, and it was a straight line between the two tracts and was indicated by chops which were marked from one end of the line to the other. Mrs. Brown [defendant’s predecessor in title] herself told me to run the line, and was present on the ground a portion of the time while the line was being run. After the line was run she agreed to it.” Thomas Hart, one of the plaintiffs, testified: “The whole division line as established is in the woods between the two tracts and is plainly marked from one end to the other” by blazes made by the surveyor.
1. Where the dividing line between coterminous owners is indefinite, unascertained, or disputed, the owners may by parol agreement duly executed establish the line, and the line thus established will control their deeds, notwithstanding the statute of frauds. Farr v. Woolfolk, 118 Ga. 277 (45 S. E. 230).
2. Where the line between coterminous proprietors is indefinite, unascertained, or disputed, a parol agreement fixing the dividing lino may ■ bo executed by the erection of physical monuments upon the agreed line or by the marking- of trees plainly indicating the line. Actual occupancy to the agreed line, by cultivation or the erection of fences on the line, is not indispensable to the diie execution of the parol agreement. The court therefore erred in awarding a nonsuit. See Osteen v. Wynn, 131 Ga. 209, 215 (62 S. E. 37, 127 Am. St. R. 212) ; Shiver v. Hill, 148 Ga. 616 [97 S. E. 676).
Judgment reversed.