Amy Talboy v. Martha Dukes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 4, 2023
DocketA23A1068
StatusPublished

This text of Amy Talboy v. Martha Dukes (Amy Talboy v. Martha Dukes) 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
Amy Talboy v. Martha Dukes, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., BROWN and MARKLE, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

October 4, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A1068. TALBOY v. DUKES.

BROWN, Judge.

Amy Talboy appeals from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to her

neighbor, Martha Dukes, in the declaratory judgment action Talboy filed to establish

an easement for a sewer line on the property of Dukes. She contends that the trial court

erred by failing to conclude that genuine issues of fact exist as to the public element

of a prescriptive easement in relation to a sewer line that ran from Talboy’s property

through Dukes’ property to connect to a sewer main line. For the reasons explained

below, we affirm.

“On appeal from the grant of summary judgment this Court conducts a de novo

review of the evidence to determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact

and whether the undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving

party, warrant judgment as a matter of law.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Merlino v. City of Atlanta, 283 Ga. 186, 186-187 (657 SE2d 859) (2008). So viewed,

the record shows that in August 2004, Dukes moved into a home solely owned by her

husband on Merrick Drive. Over seven years later, in February 2012, her husband

conveyed the property to himself and Dukes as joint tenants. He died in 2019. Dukes’

home uses a gravity-fed sewer line.

In April 1997, Talboy bought property on West Roxboro Road that shares a

contiguous rear property line with Dukes’ property and is uphill from the Dukes’

property. Talboy’s home was built in 1959, and the gravity-fed sewer line exited the

rear of the home and went downhill through Dukes’ property to connect in some

fashion with the sewer main line on Merrick Drive. It did not connect with the main

sewer line on West Roxboro Road because it exited the rear of the home below the

grade of both West Roxboro Road and the existing sewer main on West Roxboro

Road. Gravity-fed sewer lines can only flow downhill. There is no evidence of a

recorded easement for the original sewer line. The survey obtained by Dukes’ husband

in 1994 does not depict a sewer line coming from the Talboy property through the

Dukes’ property.

Sometime between 2000 and 2010, Talboy noticed a white plastic sewer

cleanout in Dukes’ yard. Not long after she noticed the new cleanout, she noticed a

2 periodic wet spot or small puddle in front of a treeline in her back yard a few feet from

the rear boundary line.

Dukes testified that the sewer line from her home to Merrick Drive was replaced

in late 2003 or early 2004, during a time when she was separated from her husband and

not living in the home. She did not know if the new sewer line followed the same line

as the former sewer line and did not see any trenching when the new line was installed.

In December 2018, Talboy noticed solid white material in the same location as

the wet spot she had previously observed; this material was confined to her yard. She

contacted the City of Atlanta and learned that its estimated response time was 45 days.

A plumber she hired advised her that there was a blockage in the sewer line and

recommended that she contact the City to determine where the blockage was located.

The City responded faster than anticipated and may have been onsite the same day as

the plumber. In her deposition, Talboy testified that she was “not sure who came out

first. . . . [T]he [cleanout] that was spewing sewage was underground. Somebody

excavated that and told me it was an old [cleanout], and I think I recall the [C]ity

excavating that.”1 After being on site for about an hour “around the sewage hole,” the

1 In her affidavit submitted in opposition to Dukes’ motion for summary judgment, Talboy averred, “[t]he people for the City inspected the wet area and told me that there was an old [cleanout] in the wet area. . . .”

3 City advised her that the problem was not something for which the City was

responsible and that her sewage line crossed into Dukes’ property.

Talboy admitted that just looking at Dukes’ property would not have revealed

that Talboy’s underground sewer line went through Dukes’ property. Dukes testified

that she did not know the location of the original sewer pipes on either her property or

that of Talboy, including the location of the line from the Talboy property to Merrick

Drive.

In an affidavit, Talboy asserted that she first saw the “old metal cleanout in

December 2018,” and claimed that “[a]lthough [the] old cleanout could be seen, [she]

had not done yard work in [her] back and had not noticed it.” In her unsworn amended

complaint, however, Talboy alleged that the City’s crew “located an old metal cleanout

buried in the wet area which was the source of the water.” (Emphasis supplied.)

After learning that the City was not responsible for any repair, Talboy contacted

Noel Bonnick with PlumberATL. On January 9, 2019, Bonnick installed a new sewer

line that connected with Dukes’ sewer line rather than directly to the main sewer line

on Merrick Drive.2 Dukes and Talboy later learned that such a “grapevine” connection

2 Dukes testified that on that date, Bonnick “showed [her] the broken off pipe in . . . Talboy’s yard . . . that was on the other side of the fence . . . and said that he thought it came through our yard. And it was a broken off, like clay-ish looking pipe.

4 is no longer allowed by the City Code. A dispute between the parties then ensued as

to whether Bonnick had permission to connect Talboy’s sewer line to Dukes’ line and

the remediation of damage to the landscape and hardscape in Dukes’ yard as a result

of Bonnick’s work.

Talboy subsequently filed a petition for declaratory judgment and injunctive

relief and sought damages for the alleged intentional disconnection of her sewer line

when the sewer line on Dukes’ property was replaced. She sought a declaration that

she had an easement over Duke’s property for her sewer line and an injunction

preventing Dukes from disconnecting the new grapevine sewer line until the rights of

the parties could be established. Dukes filed a counterclaim seeking damages for

trespass, intentional infliction of emotional distress,3 and a writ of ejectment requiring

the removal of the new sewer line and barring Talboy from further entry onto Dukes’

property. In an amended petition, Talboy abandoned her claim for damages based upon

the intentional disconnection of her sewer line and asserted a claim for attorney fees

and costs under OCGA § 13-6-11. She asserted in her amended petition that she had

It was very old and it was jagged.” When asked for clarification of what she saw, Dukes described it as a “a cleanout, I believe.” 3 Dukes asserted that Talboy’s plumber disturbed the gravesite for her pet cats against her express instruction.

5 an easement across Dukes’ property because the original sewer line that serviced her

property and ran through Dukes’ property was allowed by Dukes’ predecessor in title

and was used in an open and obvious manner since its installation in 1959.

Following discovery, Dukes moved for summary judgment in her favor on

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