127 Ga. 789 | Ga. | 1907
1. The evidence authorized the court to find: and hold that the acts of trespass set forth in the plaintiff’s petition would result in irreparable damage. Camp v. Dixon, 112 Ga. 872; Massee-Felton Lumber Co. v. Simmons, 122 Ga. 297.
.2. The cutting of timber may be enjoined when the defendant is solvent and .the plaintiff has not a “perfect title” as required in certain cases by the Civil Code, §4927, provided the damages are irreparable, and the circumstances are such as to indicate that the trespasses are constantly recurring and likely to involve a multiplicity of suits. Hence the court did not err in refusing to dismiss the plaintiff’s petition, which alleged the above facts, on the ground that “there was no legal abstract of title attached to said petition.” Smith v. Smith, 105 Ga. 106; Gray Lumber Co. v. Gaskin, 122 Ga. 342.
4. One ground of the defense set up in the court below consisted in the allegation that the defendants were entitled to the timber in controversy under the terms of a certain lease; but the brief of evidence contains only a description of the lease, which is altogether insufficient to show the nature and legal effect of that instrument; and it is, therefore, impossible for this court to determine from the evidence how the issue thus made should have been decided. Fagg v. Donaldson, 77 Ga. 691; Whelchel v. Duckett, 91 Ga. 132.
Judgment affirmed.