118 Ga. 737 | Ga. | 1903
J. T. Gill filed a petition under the Civil Code, § 4760, with two justices of the peace of Liberty county, against the Savannah, Florida and Western Railway Company, to abate an alleged nuisance. The petition alleged, in substance, that Gill had at the time, and had had for several years previous thereto, a store in which he conducted a general merchandise business, within fifty yards of the track of the defendant company, about a quarter of a mile east of Walthourville station; that the store was situated immediately upon the public road leading from Hines-ville to Johnston’s station, across the railroad at that point; that the road was not obstructed when he began business in his store; that subsequently the railroad company closed such public road at the point where it crossed its track, and had kept it closed ; that the obstruction to such road was an immediate annoyance to the citizens in general, and worked inconvenience and special damage to him, for the reason that his customers could not reach his store without inconvenience, which had decreased his trade. ■ The obstruction complained of consisted of a wire fence built by the railroad company across the road. Upon the hearing before the justices of the peace and twelve freeholders of the county, a verdict was rendered finding that the road obstructed was.a public road, and that the obstruction was a public nuisance which worked special damage and injury to Gill in particular, and that it should be abated; upon which verdict a judgment was rendered by the justices, ordering the abatement of the nuisance. The railway company carried the case, by certiorari, to the superior court, where the certiorari was overruled, and the company excepted.-
We do not think it can be said that any nuisance which may be shown to be manifestly injurious to the public health and safety necessarily tends to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general, or that any nuisance which tends greatly to corrupt the manners and morals of the people tends to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general. If this were true, then, under the construction given to this section in the case in the 50th Georgia, the first clause thereof would be entirely superfluous; and if it is not true, then, as stated above, neither of these classes of nuisances could be abated under this section, unless the proof also showed that it tended to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general. That this section of the Civil Code defines three distinct classes of public nuisances we think clearly appears when we consider it in connection with the Penal Code, §641, which declares : “ Any person who shall erect, or continue after notice to abate, a nuisance which tends to annoy the community, or injure the health of the citizens in general, or to corrupt the public morals, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” It is to be noted that both section 4760 of the Civil Code and section 641 of the Penal Code are taken from the Penal Code of 1833. Section twenty-four of the tenth division of that code declared: “All nuisances not here mentioned, which tend to annoy the community, or injure the health of the citizens in general, or to corrupt the public morals, shall be indictable, and punished by fine or imprisonment iu the common jail of the county, or both, at the discretion of the court. And any nuisance which tends to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general, is manifestly injurious to the public health and safety, or tends greatly to corrupt the manners and morals of the people, may be abated and suppressed by the order of any two or
For the foregoing reasons, we are of opinion that the ruling made in Macon & Brunswick Railroad Co. v. State ex rel. Pate, supra, in so far as it depended upon the construction there given to the provisions of the Civil Code, §4760, is not sound, and, leave having been granted to review the same, it is to this extent overruled. We are clearly of opinion that the two justices of the peace had authority, under this code section, to abate a nuisance of the character here complained of; a fence constructed across a public road, for the purpose of preventing its use, being a nuisance which tends to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general.
While section 4760, in terms, provides only for the abatement of a public nuisance, in the manner therein specified, it has been several times held that a private nuisance may be abated under that section. Ruff v. Phillips, 50 Ga. 130; Salter v. Taylor, 55 Ga. 310; Hart v. Taylor, 61 Ga. 156; Holmes v. Jones, 80 Ga. 659. In the last three cases cited the nuisances abated were obstructions in priyate ways. Surely if a private nuisance may be abated under this section, upon an application made in the name of the party injured thereby, a nuisance which is both public and private may be abated under it, upon the application and in the name of any citizen who suffers special injury therefrom in which the public does not participate. If he has, as we have demonstrated, the right to proceed in his own name to abate such a public nuisance, he has the right to avail himself of the means provided for the abatement of such a nuisance. In Wetter v. Campbell, 60 Ga. 266, Campbell filed a petition, under the provisions of section 4760, to abate a nuisance alleged to have been caused by Wetter. The nuisance complained of was a dam erected by Wetter across a creek, which caused the water to overflow the lands of petitioner and others in the neighborhood, “ destroying growing crops, and preventing further cultivation, tending to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general, and working hurt, damage, and inconvenience to petitioner.” Upon the hearing before the justices of the peace the defendant demurred to the proceeding, on the ground that the justices of the peace had no jurisdiction thereof. The demurrer was overruled. This court affirmed the judgment of the court below, holding that the justices of the peace had jurisdiction to abate such a nuisance. If any authority were needed to sustain the prop
“The application for public road from Johnston station, to Hinesville, leaving the Darien road about a quarter mile below and by Allen’s mill-pond, through Thomas Simmons’ lane and crossing*747 railroad about one fourth mile below the station east, is hereby granted on the understanding that the road running by York Winn’s place shall take the same route as at present and shall not interfere with his field.
“ I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy from the minutes of the meeting of the commissioners court as it appears of record September 7th, 1875. The said minutes are signed hy Nicholas Brown O. C. G. A. Anderson C. C. J. M. Smith C. C. Hinesville, Ga. January 25th, 1902.
“E. C. Miller, Clerk of Board County Commissioners liberty County, Ga.”
The objections to the admission of this paper in evidence were: “ 1st. It was not properly authenticated, or that the certificate was not in proper form, and its contents were insufficient to admit the document in evidence; 2nd. That the contents of the document were too indefinite and meager; and 3rd. That no record of the proceedings leading up to the granting of the order was sought to be introduced, and that the order itself was not sufficient to entitle it to go in evidence; 4th. That the order did not show that the public road therein granted and mentioned had been established according to law.” The first and second of these objections were themselves “ too indefinite and meager ” to properly raise any question for decision. The first objection failed to point out wherein the document in question was not properly authenticated, or wherein the certificate was not in proper form, and the second objection failed to indicate in what respect “ the' contents of the document were too indefinite and meager.” What we have said above in reference to indefinite and general assignments of error applies also to such objections to the admissibility of evidence. The third objection was sufficiently specific, and the fourth, when considered in connection with the third, as it was doubtless intended to be, may be held to be sufficient. These objections present the question whether an order of a board of commissioners of roads and revenues, establishing a public roád, is admissible in evidence without being accompanied by the record of the proceedings upon which such order was based. Counsel contend that the board of commissioners which granted this order was a court of limited jurisdiction, and invoke the rule applicable to the introduction in evidence of the judgments of courts of this class. This contention
This court has recognized this principle in Green v. Bethea, 30 Ga. 896, where it was held: “Where the owner of land through which a road passes has permitted it to be used for that purpose, he keeping a gate at each end to protect his plantation, the public have only acquired a restrictive prescriptive right; and- to that extent, and with that qualification, are entitled to enjoy it.” In reference to the length of time in which a road must be used by the public as a highway in order to establish a prescriptive right to it as such, most of the courts hold that it must be used for a period of time conforming to that necessary to establish title to real estate by prescription. Some courts, however, hold that the open, uninterrupted, and continuous use of a road by the public for a much less period of time will raise a presumption in favor of the establishment of the road as a public highway. In some of the States the time necessary to establish the road by prescription has been fixed by statute. In 'this State, actual adverse possession of lands by itself, for twenty years, will give good title by prescription against every one except the State, or persons laboring under the disabilities specified by the law. There was ample evidence to support a finding by the jury that the road in question had been openly, uninterruptedly, and continuously used b}- the public, as a public road, for more than twenty years, before the defendant company obstructed it; and this was sufficient to establish a prescriptive right in the' public to its free and unobstructed use as a public highway. Granting that the certified copy of the order of the proper county authorities, purporting to establish the road as a public road, was not admissible for the purpose of showing that the road was duly established by this order, without being accompanied by proof that the preliminary requirements
<Judgment affirmed.