47 So. 109 | Ala. | 1908
This is an action of debt, brought under section 4137 of the Code of 1896, to recover the pen
The undisputed facts of this case show that the plaintiff is the owner of the N. % of the N. E. % of section 13, township 7, range 28, in Henry county, and that the defendant is the owner of the S. V2 of the S. E. Vi- of section 12 in the same township and range; the plaintiff’s land being located immediately south of the defendant’s. In other words their lands are separated by the section line which runs east and west between sections 12 and 13. Each of them claimed to own up to the section line; but there is a dispute as to the exact location of that line. Two surveys were made to ascertain and locate the line; one having been run by County Purveyor Craven
It is impossible to read the evidence set out in the record without reaching the conclusion that the real controversy between the parties is the location of the boundary line. If the Craven survey marks the true line, the trees were cut on the N. % of the N. E. % of section 13; whereas, if the Roberts survey is the correct one, then such cutting was on the S. % of the S. E. % of section 12. And so the litigation is resolved into a contest between the parties as to their respective titles. But, if this is not true — if the testimony is not without conflict to the effect that the defendant, at the time the trees were cut, acted under the bona fide belief that they were on his own land, it very strongly tends to show that state of the case. In this view, it was competent to show that the plaintiff accepted and recognized the Craven survey as the true line between his land and the land of the defendant. It is no valid objection to the question propounded to plaintiff (calling for such testimony) that it was not limited to the boundary line between sections 12 and 13. There was no evidence, at the time the question was- asked, that any survey had been made, except that between sections 12 and 13; and the question was necessarily limited to that survey. It was also competetnt for the defendant to show that plaintiff’s predecessors in title recognized and accepted
The survey of the line between plaintiff’s land and lands of the defendant lying in section 18, east of plaintiff’s, was not pertinent at the time plaintiff was asked if he did not accept the Craven survey as the true line between those subdivisions. Moreover, the question assumed that such survey had been made, when in truth no proof of the fact had been offered.
That Dr. Long had a gun with him, at the time the trees were cut, was a part of the res gestae, and competent as evidence; and the court committed no error in admitting this fact.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.