Adair v. Spellman Seminary

79 S.E. 589, 13 Ga. App. 600, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 271
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 1913
Docket4695
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 589 (Adair v. Spellman Seminary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adair v. Spellman Seminary, 79 S.E. 589, 13 Ga. App. 600, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 271 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Pottle, J.

On July 23, 1901, Forrest Adair, as executor of the last will of George W. Adair, filed in the recorder’s court of the City of Atlanta a petition against Spellman Seminary, a corporation conducting an educational institution in said city, to abate certain alleged nuisances which the plaintiff averred the defendant had erected and maintained in certain streets over which the plaintiff had an easement. The petition avers, that at the time of his death George W. Adair was the owner of two city lots known as numbers 10 and 11, according to a plat of what was formerly known as the James property, and consisting of about fifty acres of land, bounded on the north and east by Greensferry avenue, south by Chapel street, and west by Chapel and Lee streets; that on this plat the tract of land was subdivided into 140 lots, including lots 10 and 11, which were owned by George W. Adair and are in the control of the plaintiff as executor; that upon this plat, in addition to the streets bounding the land, there appeared the following streets running north and south, to wit: Henry, Culver, Reynolds, Leonard, and Lizzie; and running east and west: Ella, Keith, Bhelps, Broom-head, and Leonard. It is alleged that each and all of these streets are public streets of the City of Atlanta, and were such from the time they were laid out and during the period hereinafter mentioned. The plaintiff complains that the defendant has erected a fence across Leonard, Reynolds, Keith, Phelps, and Broomhead streets, so as to obstruct the free use and enjoyment of these highways by the plaintiff and the public; that the effect of the erection of this fence is to enclose parts of Leonard and Broomhead streets, and the whole of Reynolds, Keith, and Phelps streets within one enclosure, and completely to stop the use of all of said streets and parts of said streets. It is further averred that the defendant has erected certain buildings upon the tract, which buildings extend over and into and across certain of the streets above mentioned, so as to prevent the use of these streets by the plaintiff and the public. The plaintiff avers that he is entitled to use these streets as a citizen of Atlanta, and that he has sustained special injury not common to the public by reason of the fact that all of the lots embraced [602]*602within the James tract were sold with reference to these streets; that George W. Adair bought lots numbers 10 and 11, which were a part of this tract, with reference to these streets, which afforded more convenient and easy access to and from these lots to Greens-ferry avenue; and that by the closing up of these streets by the defendant, lots numbers 10 and 11 have been depreciated in value.

The defendant filed a special plea to the jurisdiction of the court, setting up that the streets which the plaintiff alleged had been obstructed by the defendant never were public streets- of the City of Atlanta and never were open streets or ways; that the plaintiff’s right, if he had any, is a mere contractual easement in land, and that the question sought to be raised by said proceeding is one involving title to land, being brought for the purpose of testing the question as to whether the defendant has such right and title to the land covered by the streets mentioned as would authorize it to close these streets, and such a proceeding is, under the constitution and laws, cognizable only in the superior court of Fulton county. Subject to the plea to the jurisdiction, the defendant demurred and answered. The demurrer was overruled and an order was passed reciting that the special plea would not be considered as a plea to the jurisdiction, but the defendant could file the same as a part of its defense. The defendant answered and set up the following defenses: (1) that the alleged streets obstructed by it were never opened or traveled or used and accepted by the public as streets; (2) that neither the plaintiff nor his testator ever had acquired the right to use any of the alleged streets, except that the public had occasionally used a part of Leonard and Broomhead streets for a passageway through the defendant’s property; that in closing the Leonard-Broomhead way the defendant acted with the consent of the public and every person interested therein, and at the same time opened a better and shorter way through its property and around it from the same point on Ella street northward to Greensferry avenue; (3) that the entire tract occupied by the defendant has been for a number of years openly and notoriously in its possession and held by it- as one piece of property, with no streets through it except the LeonardBroomhead way, which has been straightened as above mentioned; that more than a year before the filing of the petition the defendant entered upon an extensive scheme of building and improvement, [603]*603and in pursuance thereof and before any objection was made by' the plaintiff, had laid out and expended on the buildings complained of in the plaintiff’s petition more than $100,000, with no suggestion by the plaintiff of any rights claimed by him or his testator; that the defendant’s expenditure for improvements 'on said land represents an outlay of more than $300,000, nearly all of which would be rendered useless for the purposes for which it was expended, if the prayers of' the «petition were granted; that the circumstances under which the streets were closed and the improvements made are such as to estop’ the plaintiff from interfering at this time with the progress of the work; (4) that George W. Adair, owner of lots numbers 10 and 11, without the consent of the defendant, closed up a part of Chapel street which was a part of. the J ames plat, 'and his estate is now in possession of a part of the street so closed. The defendant avers that the closing up of this part of said street by George W. Adair is evidence of.his assent to the abandonment of the street scheme as indicated by the plat, and operates to estop his executor from complaining of the obstruction of other streets by the defendant.

The ease came on to be heard before the recorder in 1901, and, after the evidence was introduced, -he rendered a judgment in favor of the defendant, upon the ground that under the evidence no nuisance existed. The plaintiff sued out a writ of certiorari in the latter part of 1902. The case was continued from time to time in the superior court, and finally on January 1, 1913, a judgment was entered overruling the certiorari. The plaintiff excepted. The evidence before the recorder was voluminous and somewhat conflicting. From the evidence it appeared that about the year 1879, John H. James caused a plat to be made of the fifty-acre tract described in the plaintiff’s petition, divided it into 140 lots, and laid out, as a part of the plat, Lizzie, Ella, Leonard, Henry, Keith, Phelps, and Broomhead streets. The tract was bounded by Chapel and Lee streets and Greensferry avenue, all of which were original highways, were no part of the plat, and have not been obstructed in any way by the defendant. The property occupied by the defendant was acquired by it as an educational institution, at different times, either from James or from various persons holding under' him. The conveyances to the Seminary covered a period beginning in 1883 and extending down to 1899. In each deed the property [604]*604conveyed was described by lot numbers with reference to the J ames plat and the streets which had been laid out thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 589, 13 Ga. App. 600, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adair-v-spellman-seminary-gactapp-1913.