55 Ga. App. 368 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
Mrs. Della Brown filed with the ordinary of Cobb County a petition against the Seaboard Air-Line Railway Company and its section foreman, James M. Lancaster, to have obstructions removed from a private way claimed by prescription. The petition as amended alleged that she owned a tract of land through which the defendant’s railroad runs at Edna station in Cobb County; that she has a private way leading from the end of
The motion to dismiss the writ of error, because the obstructions complained of in the alleged private way were removed by the sheriff after the ordinary passed on the case in 1929, and the parties had been using the private way in question since that time, and the case had become moot, is without merit. It appears that the case was tried before the ordinary on November 26, 1929, and in due time was carried by writ of certiorari to the superior court. Exceptions to the answer thereto were filed and sustained, and, after the answer was amended, the case was finally passe'd on by the judge of the superior court on June 23, 1936. The fact that the parties may have been using the alleged private way during the pending litigation does not render the case moot. Therefore the motion to dismiss is denied.
“Under a proceeding to cause obstructions to be removed from a private way, based on the act of 1872 (Civil Code, §§ 678, 679), and alleging solely that the way was one established by prescription for more than seven years, the applicant is not entitled to a judgment by proof that the road has been in use as a private way for more than a year, and that the owner has closed it without giving to the common users thirty days notice in writing, in order that they might take legal steps to have it made permanent, as required by § 673 of the Political Code.” Nugent v. Watkins, 129 Ga. 382 (3) (58 S. E. 888). The plaintiff in the case at bar predicated her petition to remove the obstructions from the alleged private way solely on the ground that her right thereto had been established by prescription for more than seven years. It was said in Nugent v. Watkins, supra, that “The petitioner can not proceed on the ground alone that she has a perfect prescriptive right of way, and, failing to establish that, obtain a judgment on the ground that there was no written notice given by the owner of his intention to close up the road. She alleged that the private way in question had been in constant and uninterrupted use for seven years or more. This was denied. She must recover on the case which she made, if at all. If she desired to rely upon the closing of the road used as a private way by the owner thereof
Judgment reversed.