15 Ga. 202 | Ga. | 1854
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
We hold, that such possession must be constituted, either by 'residence on the land in person, or by servants, or agents, accompanied with the exercise of ownership; or by cultivation ■ of a portion of the land, accompanied by acts of ownership over the balance; or it must consist of acts of ownership, “positive, definite and notorious”, such as a continued user of 'the land, by going upon it and felling trees, cutting timber from it, and other such acts as serve to show the character and ex'tent of the claim. A residence in the vicinity of the land, merely, and a claim to it—though such claim be generally re- ■ cognized, and spoken of in the neighborhood, and affirmed by '; all the vicinage—unaccompanied by any of the acts and indi■ciaof ownership above mentioned, is insufficient to constitute 'possession.
But from this record, it appears that four of the plaintiffs were not in life, at the testator’s death. They were, consesequently, not entitled to recover. The defendants, therefore, should have had a new trial, on this ground. As the case goes back on other points, it is unnecessary to notice the grounds of motion for new trial, on account of newly discovered testimony.