First Christian Church v. Realty Investment Co.

178 S.E. 303, 180 Ga. 35, 1934 Ga. LEXIS 446
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 14, 1934
DocketNo. 10463
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 178 S.E. 303 (First Christian Church v. Realty Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Christian Church v. Realty Investment Co., 178 S.E. 303, 180 Ga. 35, 1934 Ga. LEXIS 446 (Ga. 1934).

Opinions

Gilbert, Justice.

The First Christian Church at Macon, Georgia, a corporation of Bibb County, filed, on July 3, 1933, a petition in which it prayed that the Realty Investment Company, also a corporation of Bibb County, be enjoined from obstructing a certain paved private way over which the petitioner alleged that it had [36]*36acquired a prescriptive right of use. The plaintiff alleged that it owned property at the corner of High and Orange streets in the City of Macon, on which it had erected a church, and owned a house and lot on High Street adjacent to the church property, which house and lot had been purchased in July, 1926, from Leon S. Dure, who is the president of the defendant; that this lot extended back about twenty feet further in the rear than the church property; that the defendant owned improved property on Orange Street next to plaintiff’s two described lots; that the plaintiff has had, for more than seven years, continuous and uninterrupted use of part of the private way running across the improved property of the defendant and immediately adjacent to the rear of the church property; that the space so used is not over fifteen feet wide, and is the space originally appropriated; that it has never abandoned the same, and has kept it open and in repair for the period named; that defendant has hauled bricks to the driveway, and is preparing to erect a wall which would obstruct plaintiff’s use of the driveway, and, though requested to desist from obstructing it, has refused to do so; that the obstruction would constitute a continuing nuisance and cause irreparable damage and injury to the property of plaintiff; and that plaintiff has.no remedy at law. Defendant filed an answer denying certain allegations and admitting others. Plaintiff introduced at the hearing certain affidavits to the effect that it had caused the driveway to be swept regularly, and on one occasion had caused to be removed therefrom a tree-limb with a great deal of foliage which had been blown by the wind upon the driveway, and which in diameter was about the size of a man’s arm and large enough to practically cover the driveway, and certainly large enough to obstruct the free passage of vehicles through said driveway. Leon S. Dure, president of the defendant, testified that he had sent the janitor of the apartment-house of defendant to sweep the driveway, but could not specifically state that he had done it, but was sure he had, because he, Dure, was passing there all the time and lived in the apartment-house. It was agreed by counsel for defendant that plaintiff had proved all the elements alleged to show a prescriptive right to use the driveway, except that it had kept the same open and in repair for seven years. The court denied an interlpcutory injunction, and the plaintiff excepted.

In the brief for the plaintiff it is stated that the private way [37]*37was constructed by Leon S. Dure about the year 1919 as a means of ingress and egress to the rear of the house and lot which was subsequently purchased by plaintiff in July, 1926. It does not claim that it obtained any express grant to the use of the private way in connection with the purchase of the house and lot, but asserts a prescriptive right to the use of the private way. The defendant claims, in its brief, that at the time of the purchase of the house and lot by the plaintiff Dure was acting in his own private capacity, though he is now the president of the defendant; and this is not denied in the reply brief of the plaintiff. In the brief for the defendant it is also stated that “This driveway has been open for more than seven years, and plaintiff in error has passed over it without let or hindrance during that time. It is true that it has been kept open, but the plaintiff in error has done nothing to keep it open; for nothing was necessary except the removal of one limb of a tree that fell across it during that time. This limb was removed by the plaintiff in error. Equally is it true that no repairs to the driveway proper have been necessary. The concrete abutment at its entrance has been struck by an automobile entering it, and the Kealty Investment Company repaired that; but there has never been a time during the seven years when repairs to the driveway were necessary in order that it might be used for the purposes for which the plaintiff in error used it. . . The only question in this case is whether one who, for the purpose of reaching the rear o l his own lot in a city, uses for more than seven years a paved driveway, which he did not construct, across the property of another, can prevent that other’s obstructing the driveway over that other’s own property, without showing that he who claims that the driveway has become a private way by prescription has kept that driveway open and in repair for seven years.” It does not appear that the plaintiff asserted any adverse possession of the driveway in question, but it claims to have acquired a-prescriptive right to the use of it under the Civil Code (1910), § 3641, and to be entitled, under § 824, to an injunction against the obstruction of the driveway. It is inferable from the brief of the plaintiff that it concedes that the initial use of the driveway was permissive. The defendant argues in its brief that such use was permissive only, and it is not denied in the reply brief of the plaintiff, which, on the contrary, appears to countenance the premise and to seek to show [38]*38that notwithstanding such permissive use it had acquired a prescriptive right. The general law (Code 1910, § 36-11) prescribes the mode of acquiring a right to use a private way over the lands of another person, and is as follows: “The right of private way over another’s land may arise from express grant; or from prescription by seven years uninterrupted use through improved lands, or twenty years use over wild lands;” etc. An exception to that provision is where a person has laid out such a private way as provided in Code (1910), § 818. The petitioner in this case does not claim that it “laid out” the private way. Only the provisions of section 3641 were contained in any of the Codes, as to the acquisition of use of private ways by prescription, prior to the act of 1872 (Ga. Laws 1872, p. 60.) Section 821 was codified from that act. It provides against interference with a private way the use of which has been obtained under § 3641, and is as follows: “Whenever a private way has been in constant and uninterrupted use for seven years or more, and no legal steps have been taken to abolish the same, it shall not be lawful for any one to interfere with said private way.” That section does not confer any right to the use of another’s land independently of § 3641, and is not in conflict with it, but the two must be read together. As was said in Watkins v. Country Club, 120 Ga. 45, 49 (47 S. E. 538) : “The provisions of these two sections can stand together by construing the seven years in the first section [Civil Code (1910), § 3611] to refer to improved lands. . . As the amended petition based the claim of the petitioner to have the obstructions removed upon seven years continuous and uninterrupted user of the way, without alleging that the land over which the way was so used was improved land, the demurrer was well taken and properly sustained.” Thus it will be seen that to invoke the provisions of § 821 the claimant must also bring himself within § 3611. What must be shown to give the right claimed by the plaintiff in this case has been set forth in many decisions of this court. In Johnson v. Sams, 136 Ga. 448 (2) (71 S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.E. 303, 180 Ga. 35, 1934 Ga. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-christian-church-v-realty-investment-co-ga-1934.