105 So. 652 | Ala. | 1925
The trial was had on counts A, B, and C, and plea of not guilty. This is the second appeal.
In Cox v. Broderick,
The intention of adjacent or coterminous landowners in holding to certain established or agreed lines, fences, monuments, or turnrows dividing their lands, is always a question for the jury to decide from all of the attendant relevant facts and circumstances. Cox v. Broderick, supra; Smith v. Bachus, supra. And if the parties intended to hold to such dividing line, regardless of whether it was the true line, if they so hold for the time prescribed by law it completes the bar of the statute. Gibson v. Gaines, supra. Where such a line between coterminous owners is recognized as such line by such owners, with the claim of ownership thereto, for 10 years, it becomes their legal boundary line between their respective properties, regardless of the lines as described in their deeds. Hess v. Rudder,
The charges refused to plaintiff and those given at the request of defendant were according to the former ruling in this case. We have no desire to depart therefrom.
The witness Anthony was testifying from a map in evidence shown to be substantially correct. He gave the several markings of his survey or lines with reference to surveys, distances, physical boundaries, pasture fence, public road, and with reference to Sanderson's home as dividing the lands of the parties. The witness had just stated:
"That line through there represents the true line dividing the southwest quarter and the southeast quarter. It divides the lands of Mr. Sanderson and Mr. Hodges. This dotted line commencing about the true line and varying a little bit west of it represents an old fence row a part of the way only; a part of that was not traceable."
There was no error in the ruling of the court as shown by the subsequent testimony of the witness. The bill of exceptions recites:
"Here counsel for plaintiff asked witness the following question: 'A part was through some cultivated lands, and some part of it was not traceable?'
"The witness answered the above question as follows: 'The indications are that the original corner of this fence row was there. There used to be a fence along there, and there are indications of where it cornered.'
"Defendant objected to what indications there are; the court sustained the objection as to indications; the plaintiff then and there duly excepted to the ruling of the court.
"The witness continued: There is a fence row. It's distinguishable for some distance and then you can't see it any more; you can't discover it after it gets some distance over the hill there. It shows up again before you get to this public road. There is some fields here and the fence row is distinguishable there, and out here is a section, in this part of it, and there is a kind of jump-off. You can tell where the old fence row went there. I never looked for it in that strip of land east of Mr. Hodges' pasture and before you get to the public road."
The custom among surveyors to mark for "certain lines" was properly permitted. *565 The witness had qualified as such an expert, and was properly permitted to interpret surveyors' marks.
The question in Mixon v. Pennington,
The witness Cashion testified that he helped to make the Clark survey between said lands; that he was acquainted with the line; that in said survey there was "located and established" a corner at the northeast corner of said 80 acres of land. The witness was asked its distance from the river, and stated that it was "right on the bank." He described the line, etc.
There was no error in the question and answer:
"In going along there, did you find hacks and evidences of previous surveys or any timber along there? Well, when we started south, there was a red oak that was marked with two hacks; that was on the line when we first started out."
This was competent as tending to indicate that the witness knew where the Clark line or survey was, and indicated its whereabouts by surveyors' markings. Such was an inference when considered with the other evidence. Plaintiff, in cross-examining this witness, asked "Did Mr. Sanderson agree that those corners down there were correct?" and the defendant's objection was sustained. The witness answered:
"Mr. Sanderson did not say that the corner, which is shown by a rock marker, was the correct corner on the south. He never did say it was correct."
The question should have been permitted. Garrett v. Sewell,
It was not proper cross-examination of the defendant as a witness to ask "You never thought that line running — the government subdivision line — the true line running between those two 80 acres, was a crooked line, did you?" He should have been asked concerning facts, not cognitions. He testified that he claimed by the marked trees that were on a line that looked to be practically straight.
We find no reversible error. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.