Brannen v. Bulloch County

387 S.E.2d 395, 193 Ga. App. 151, 1989 Ga. App. LEXIS 1399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 10, 1989
DocketA89A1320
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 387 S.E.2d 395 (Brannen v. Bulloch County) 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
Brannen v. Bulloch County, 387 S.E.2d 395, 193 Ga. App. 151, 1989 Ga. App. LEXIS 1399 (Ga. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Sognier, Judge.

Bulloch County condemned property owned by various members of the Brannen family in order to reroute a county dirt road from its existing route crossing property owned by Sheppard Lumber Company to a new route around the lumber company, requiring the taking of 1.45 acres of the Brannens’ property. The Brannens petitioned the Superior Court of Bulloch County to set aside the declaration of taking solely on the basis of OCGA § 32-3-11 (b). The superior court denied the petition and the Brannens appeal.

The evidence adduced at the hearing on appellants’ petition reveals that the existing dirt road, which consisted of a forty foot right of way owned and maintained by appellee, extended across property owned by appellants before it entered property owned by Sheppard Lumber Company. The county road actually divided the plant operations of the lumber company, with an elevated conveyor belt at one point spanning the dirt road to connect two lumber company buildings. The county road then crossed property owned by third parties and intersected with a state highway. The evidence is uncontroverted that during rainy periods, the section of the county road dividing the lumber company operations would become very muddy and virtually impassable to regular vehicular traffic.

Robert T. Cox, a Bulloch County commissioner, testified that to alleviate the hazard to the motoring public, there was “no alternative but to relocate that road,” and accordingly the route circumventing the lumber company property was chosen and condemned.

The hazard to the public which was the public purpose for condemning appellants’ property and rerouting the road was the condition of the lumber company section of the road during wet weather. (We note that the witnesses referred to the increased safety of implementing a new intersection with the state highway, but as that inter *152 section lay on third parties’ property and did not require the condemnation of any property owned by appellants to effect, it has no relevance to the issues raised here.) Cox acknowledged that many if not most of the other county dirt roads were likewise prone to become muddy during rainy periods. Notwithstanding the similar conditions, the hazard on those other roads had been alleviated by the construction of drainage ditches. The record reflects, however, that no drainage ditches were maintained in the hazardous area in issue here.

The record also reflects that while the lack of drainage during wet weather was a problem, the hazard was compounded, and the impassable nature of the road was created, by the unrestricted access to the road by lumber company vehicles, especially heavy equipment like forklifts and log trucks, which churned up the dirt road all along this stretch so that, in combination with the absence of drainage ditches, when it rained the road was turned into a rutted, bogged out mud path.

The record established that there were three reasons why appellee did not alleviate this hazardous condition by maintaining drainage ditches along the stretch of road between the lumber company operations. First, in order to dig the ditches deep enough to drain the water, appellee would have had to require the lumber company to move those water pipes and electrical lines servicing the lumber company which encroached upon appellee’s right of way to the extent that they interfered with the ditch construction. Second, digging the ditches would have limited the access of lumber company vehicles to those places where culverts were installed, which (while acknowledging that restricting the access would minimize the damage to the road caused by the vehicles), Cox testified “was not practical” because the lumber company operations were “too intermingled” with the road in that area.

Third, appellee would have had to compel the lumber company to stop piling sawdust and tree bark on appellee’s right of way. Evidence established that earlier attempts to drain water from the roadway into a ditch in a section of the road approaching the affected area had been unsuccessful because the ditch would clog every time with sawdust and tree bark carried by the rain from the piles of such debris. Cox acknowledged that appellee had ordered the lumber company in the past to get the debris off the road, and photographs admitted at trial showed that the lumber company continued to place these piles of tree bark so that they encroached on the road. As to debris properly on lumber company property, evidence was adduced that similar piles of debris were maintained near the proposed road but that reassurances had been made by the lumber company to John Akins, appellee’s road maintenance supervisor, that a fence would be constructed to keep such debris from clogging the ditches servicing *153 the proposed road. Akins testified a fence could not be placed alongside the current road because there were “too many crossings there” for lumber mill vehicles.

Cox testified that there was no alternative but to relocate the road what “with all of the conglomeration that Mr. Sheppard had down there.”

Cox also testified that Sheppard (the owner of the lumber company) asked him “about closing the road to keep the hazards that he had,” but that Cox told Sheppard “the only way that [Cox] would condemn property to change the road or make it different from what it was . . . would have to be at no expense to the County taxpayers.” Cox acknowledged that he would not have condemned appellants’ property had it not been for Sheppard paying for the matter. An agreement between Sheppard and appellee’s Board of Commissioners, admitted into evidence, provided that “because of the operation of heavy logging equipment and trucks incidental to the saw mill activities carried on by [Sheppard Lumber Mill] the present location of [the county road in issue] is deemed by [appellee] to constitute a hazard to the public; and . . . [w]hereas, in order to reroute the public road it will be necessary for [appellee] to condemn certain property . . . [appellee] shall institute condemnation proceedings to acquire [appellants’ property] . . . [and appellee] shall take such action as necessary, upon completion of the proposed roadway ... to close [the preexisting road through the lumber mill]. ... All costs, including acquisition cost, attorneys fees, court costs, and other expenses incurred by [appellee] in the condemnation and acquisition of [appellants’ property] shall be reimbursed to [appellee] by [the lumber mill] .... It is specifically understood between all of the parties hereto that all cost incurred by [appellee] incidental to the performance of the respective obligations as provided herein shall be the responsibility of [the lumber mill.]”

Appellant Wilbur Brannen testified that prior to the condemnation Sheppard had attempted to buy the property condemned by appellee, but that appellants had refused to sell it to him.

We reverse.

“The validity of the public purpose for which property is condemned normally is not open to question so long as the property will be available for use by the public as a matter of right, and so long as the decision to condemn has not been made fraudulently or in bad faith. [Cits.]” (Emphasis supplied.) Dougherty County v. Burt, 168 Ga. App. 166, 169 (3) (308 SE2d 395) (1983).

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Bluebook (online)
387 S.E.2d 395, 193 Ga. App. 151, 1989 Ga. App. LEXIS 1399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brannen-v-bulloch-county-gactapp-1989.