This is a suit brought by Mrs. Lou Bogers against William Eaucett, to enjoin the defendant from trespassing upon certain land to which the plaintiff claims title. The issue is dependent upon the location of the true dividing line between adjacent lands of the parties. The court appointed . a surveyor selected by the parties, who by a survey located the line where the plaintiff claims it to be, and made a report of his survey, accompanied by a plat. An auditor was appointed to hear the evidence and to make findings of fact and law in the case. After hearing, the auditor made his report of his findings of fact and of law, which were favorable to the plaintiff, with the conclusion that the plaintiff was entitled to a perpetual injunction as prayed for against the defendant.
1. The defendant filed an exception of fact to the finding of fact by the auditor that the true line between the adjacent lands of the parties is located where the plaintiff claims it to be, and as particularly described in the report, survey, and plat of the surveyor. The ground of exception is that such finding .of the
2. The defendant filed several exceptions of law to the findings of law made by the auditor. The first is really based upon the finding of fact by the auditor to which the defendant excepted; and our ruling as to that exception of fact is controlling as to this 'exception of law. The second is to the finding of the auditor that the costs in the case, including the court costs, stenographer’s fee, the cost of. making the survey ordered by the court, and the auditor’s fee “be equally divided between the parties to the case, each to pay half of the same.” Whether the auditor did or did not have authority to make a finding as to the costs in the case is immaterial; as the court in rendering the decree adjudged, as it was authorized to do, that each of the parties should pay half of all the costs in the case.
3. The third exception of law is that the auditor admitted in evidence as an ancient document a surveyor’s plat, made in 1853, of certain land of which one McDaniel then claimed to be the owner, one 'of the lots in the survey being that to which the plaintiff now claims title. The defendant excepted to this ruling of the auditor, on the grounds that the plat was irrelevant, not shown to be correct, that it does not show that the lots platted are in the county of Hall, and because it does not show the location of the line now in controversy. The following is stated in this exception: “ Turner Quillian did testify that he had known this plat thirty-five or forty years, and saw it among his father’s papers, which his father got from Samuel Chambers to lot seven in the twelfth district [the lot now claimed'by plaintiff] and six in the eleventh district, which his father bought from said Chambers. There was no evidence from any witness as to the correctness of the plat. A copy of said plat is hereto attached, and the entire evidence bearing on the location of the line or referring to
.4. The fourth exception of law is that the auditor erred in excluding certain alleged admissions of Turner Quillian, a third person not interested in the cáse, as to the land line in question. It appears that he is the brother of the plaintiff, that he had been looking after the property for her, and that “in all these surveys when he was present he represented Mrs. Kogers.” Nothing appears showing that he had authority as the agent of the plaintiff to make any admissions in respect of the land line that would be binding on her.
5. The rulings made by the auditor in excluding as hearsay certain saj'ings of Squire O’Kelley in reference to the land line in 'question, and excepted to by the defendant in exceptions 5, 6, 7, 'and 8, were correct. It is stated in the exception that “The following evidence in the record shows that the evidence was admissible under the rules of law: That Squire O’Kelley was dead, that he was a justice of the peace and N. P., and had been 20 or '30 years, that he lived about a mile from the land, that he was an old man, a veteran of the Civil War, that he was in possession of land and owned land in the neighborhood (pp. 18 and 19 of '.the evidence), that it was his custom to write deeds, that he was about seventy when the statements were made, that he always lived in that neighborhood (p. 44 of the evidence) ; all of which was in evidence when this testimony was offered. It also appeared, at the time the evidence was offered, that Squire O’Kelley was in possession of the west half of lot number six in the eleventh district (p. 49 of the evidence).” The west half of lot number six in the eleventh district is not adjacent to either the land of the plaintiff or that of the defendant. That the ruling was proper, see Aultman v. Hodge, 150 Ga. 370, 399 (104 S. E. 1); McAfee v. Newberry, 144 Ga. 473 (87 S. E. 392).
7. Exceptions to an auditor’s report must be filed within twenty days after the filing of the report. Civil Code (1910), ,§ 5135. The law as to- this is mandatory. Littleton v. Patton, 112 Ga. 438 (4) (37 S. E. 755). If an amendment can be allowed at all ^after the twenty days, so as to add new and distinct exceptions, it must at least be necessary to show good reason why the exception yvas not filed with others in due time. Sizer v. Melton, 129 Ga. 143 (58 S. E. 1055); Mohr-Weil Lumber Co. v. Russell, 109 Ga. 579 (34 S. E. 1005).
8. In view of the rulings above announced, the court did not err in approving the auditor’s report and in decreeing that the defendant below be perpetually enjoined as prayed for in the petition.
Judgment affirmed.