Canton Partners v. the Scarbrough Group, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 25, 2012
DocketA12A0303
StatusPublished

This text of Canton Partners v. the Scarbrough Group, Inc. (Canton Partners v. the Scarbrough Group, Inc.) 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
Canton Partners v. the Scarbrough Group, Inc., (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION MIKELL, P. J., MILLER and BLACKWELL, 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. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

May 25, 2012

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A0303. CANTON PARTNERS v. THE SCARBROUGH BL-014 GROUP, INC., et al.

BLACKWELL, Judge.

It has been said that no good deed goes unpunished, and the proceedings up to

now in this case seem to suggest the truth of that proposition. Canton Partners owns

a parcel of real property in Troup County that is effectively landlocked and to which

Canton Partners has no means of access, ingress, or egress. The parcel abuts an

interstate highway, 1 and it otherwise is surrounded by property that is owned by

United Investment Company. The nearest public road from which Canton Partners

might access its property is State Route 54, and to do so, it would have to cross the

property of United Investment, as well as a tract of land that is owned by The

1 Canton Partners cannot, of course, just cut a driveway to its parcel from the interstate highway, and no one in this case suggests that it could do so. Scarbrough Group, Inc.2 Rather than run straight to the courthouse, Canton Partners

first set out to negotiate with United Investment and Scarbrough for a private way

across their lands, and its negotiations with Scarbrough were somewhat successful,

inasmuch as it obtained a temporary, one-year private way across the Scarbrough

tract. The negotiations with United Investment, however, were not as successful, and

at that point, Canton Partners turned to the courts for help, only to find that help was

not forthcoming because it had successfully negotiated with Scarbrough before suing.

Under OCGA § 44-9-40, when someone owns real property to which he “has

no means of access, ingress, and egress,” and when “a means of ingress, egress, and

access may be had over and across the lands of any private person or corporation,”

the owner of the landlocked property may file a petition with the superior court for

a private way, and if it is reasonable to do so, the superior court may condemn a

private way over the lands of the others. OCGA § 44-9-40 (b). When its negotiations

with United Investment failed, Canton Partners filed such a petition against United

Investment, seeking the condemnation of a private way across the United Investment

land to link its landlocked parcel with its temporary way over the Scarbrough tract,

2 The Scarbrough tract is situated between State Route 54 and the United Investment property.

2 which would allow Canton Partners to access its property from State Route 54, at

least as long as it maintained a right to use the temporary way over the Scarbrough

tract. The superior court concluded, however, that the condemnation of a private way

across the United Investment property would be unreasonable, inasmuch as the

condemnation would be permanent, whereas the negotiated way across the

Scarbrough tract was only temporary. Accordingly, the superior court refused the

petition against United Investment.

Instead of appealing the refusal of its petition, Canton Partners filed a second

one, this time filing against both United Investment and Scarbrough and seeking the

condemnation of a private way across both of their properties. The second petition,

however, fared no better than the first.3 The court below dismissed the second petition

as to Scarbrough, finding “as a matter of law that [Canton Partners] may not maintain

an action to [condemn a way across the Scarbrough tract] when it currently has an

existing right to use the identical property for [a means of access] by means of an

access easement that was voluntarily bargained for and agreed upon by the parties.”

3 After its original petition was refused in the Superior Court of Troup County, Canton Partners filed its second petition in the Superior Court of Fulton County. On the motion of United Investment and Scarbrough, however, the second petition was transferred to the Superior Court of Troup County, which subsequently entered the judgment from which this appeal was taken.

3 The court below also dismissed the second petition as to United Investment,

reasoning that nothing had changed since the dismissal of the first petition, and as

against United Investment, the second petition was, therefore, barred by the principle

of res judicata. Canton Partners appeals from the dismissal of its second petition, and

we reverse.

1. As we understand it, the court below essentially concluded that Canton

Partners was without standing under OCGA § 44-9-40 to petition for a private way

across the Scarbrough tract because Canton Partners had a temporary, negotiated way

across the same tract when it filed its second petition.4 This conclusion, we think, was

error. By the plain terms of the statute itself, one properly may bring a petition under

OCGA § 44-9-40 “[w]hen [he] owns real estate or any interest therein to which [he]

has no means of access, ingress, and egress” and “when a means of ingress, egress,

and access may be had over and across the lands of any private person or

corporation.” OCGA § 44-9-40 (b). When Canton Partners filed its second petition,

it had an existing right to cross over the lands of Scarbrough, but an exercise of that

right would take Canton Partners only partway from State Route 54 to its landlocked

4 The court below did not use the word “standing,” but it did say that, in the circumstances presented here, Canton Partners “may not maintain an action” against Scarbrough. That sounds to us like standing.

4 parcel. It still could not cross the United Investment property, and the landlocked

parcel was, therefore, still without a “means of access, ingress, and egress.” The lack

of a “means of access, ingress, and egress” could be remedied by a way “over and

across the lands” of United Investment and Scarbrough. Canton Partners alleged all

these things in its petition, and under the plain terms of the statute, the petition

adequately established the standing of Canton Partners to pursue a condemnation

against Scarbrough. OCGA § 44-9-40 (b); see generally Hensley v. Henry, 246 Ga.

App. 417, 419 (1) (541 SE2d 398) (2000); Mallory v. Upson County Bd. of

Education, 163 Ga. App. 377 (1) (294 SE2d 599) (1982).

That is not to say that the existence of a temporary way across the Scarbrough

tract necessarily is irrelevant to the ultimate disposition of the petition. Upon

consideration of the reasonableness of condemning a way over the Scarbrough tract,

the court below perhaps might have weighed the existence of a negotiated way

against the reasonableness of a condemnation.5 By the same token, however, the

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