The petition shows that the plaintiff owns an undivided one-sixth interest in the cemetery lot in question, as an heir of his father who owned the lot prior to and at the time of his death and was buried in it. A joint tenant, tenant in common, or other person having a part interest in lands or tenements may have and maintain an action for damages for injury to his interest therein, without joining with him any other person as plaintiff. Code, § 33-103. See also Code, § 3-111;
Sanford
v.
Sanford,
58
Ga.
259 (2);
Wilson
v.
Chandler,
60
Ga.
129;
Crawford
v.
Clark,
110
Ga.
729, 739 (
It is alleged that Wylly T. Jordan, a Commissioner of the Board of Roads and Revenues of Jefferson County, at the instance of and in concert with Lonnie Williams, the Mayor of the Town of Bartow, instructed J. B. Stanley, the county warden, to direct E. L. Brim, one of his employees, to make an entrance to Bartow Cemetery over the Kitchens plot, and that E. L. Brim, under these instructions and directions, caused the county’s con
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vict labor to tear away a portion of the brick wall separating the plot on the south side from the road to the Bartow School, to place a culvert in the ditch between the road and the Kitchens plot, to pull up iron stakes on the plot marking the graves of the plaintiff’s relatives, to strip the limbs from a large cedar tree located in a corner of the Kitchens plot, and to make a roadway into the cemetery over the Kitchens plot and across the graves of the Kitchens family. These allegations were sufficient to show a trespass on the part of the individual defendants against the rights of an owner of an interest in the burial plot.
West View Corp.
v.
Alexander,
83
Ga. App.
810 (
The petition may also be construed as setting out a cause of action for the taking and damaging of private property for public purposes without just and adequate compensation being first paid, as provided by article 1, section 3, paragraph 1, of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-301).
City of Atlanta
v.
Due,
42
Ga. App.
797 (
The contention is made that the acts of locating the new entrance into the cemetery and directing that it be made were not shown to be those of the town but only of the mayor thereof, personally and individually. The charter of the Town of Bartow (Ga. L. 1914, pp. 444, 445) authorizes the location and laying-off of new streets, alleys, or ways within the town and the alteration of the same. This distinguishes the present case from that of
McDonald
v.
Butler,
10
Ga. App.
845 (
The petition set out a cause of action against the Town of Bartow and the individual defendants, but not against Jefferson County; and the trial judge erred in sustaining the demurrers and dismissing the petition as to the Town of Bartow and the individual defendants.
Judgment reversed in part and affirmed in part.
