Glass v. Carnes

398 S.E.2d 7, 260 Ga. 627
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 21, 1990
DocketS90A0678, S90A0771. S90A0679
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 398 S.E.2d 7 (Glass v. Carnes) 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
Glass v. Carnes, 398 S.E.2d 7, 260 Ga. 627 (Ga. 1990).

Opinion

Fletcher, Justice.

This is a continuation of Carnes v. Charlock Investments (USA), Inc., 258 Ga. 771 (373 SE2d 742) (1988).

*628 Preliminary Facts

In 1987, appellant Charlock Investments, Inc. filed suit seeking to enjoin the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners from closing a portion of Settles Bridge Road which traverses property owned by appellees Emily Rees Carnes and Frances Rees.

Appellees’ property is known as the Rees farm. Charlock owns property abutting Settles Bridge Road, which adjoins the north side of the Rees farm. Charlock intends to develop its property for residential purposes. Although Charlock uses Settles. Bridge Road as a means of ingress and egress to its property, the closing of that portion of the road which traverses the Rees farm does not deprive Charlock access to its property by means of other existing county roads.

In regard to the closing of a section of a county road, OCGA § 32-7-2 (b) (1) provides:

When it is determined that a section of the county road system has for any reason ceased to be used by the public to the extent that no substantial public purpose is served by it, the county . . . after notice to property owners located thereon, may declare that section of the county road system abandoned. . . .

Finding that notice of the closing of the road had not been given to Charlock and that the road continued to serve a substantial public purpose, the trial court in 1988 ordered the road reopened. On appeal, this Court reversed, holding that under the facts of the case the superior court was not authorized to substitute its judgment for that of the Board on the question of whether the road continued to serve a substantial public purpose. This Court also held that Charlock sought an order to compel the road to be reopened and not an order to compel notice, and “[e]ven if an order to compel notice had been warranted, Charlock is not entitled to a judgment ordering the road reopened.” 258 Ga. at 773. “The Board’s decision [to close the road] remains in force.” Id.

Following this Court’s decision in Carnes, the Board voted to reopen Settles Bridge Road. Appellees instituted this suit to enjoin the Board from taking such action. Appellant Charlock and appellants Sherwin and Sandra Glass were allowed to intervene in this suit as party defendants. The Glasses’ residence is situated on a tract of land abutting the Rees farm on its western boundary, and they contend that under the deeds within their chain of title they have an express appurtenant easement over the portion of Settles Bridge Road that traverses appellees’ property. For various reasons, Charlock argues that the county had fee-simple title to the road and was entitled to *629 reopen it.

Evidence

A bench trial was held, and the following facts were established: The contested portion of Settles Bridge Road lies in the eastern half of Land Lot 285 of the 7th Land District. On March 30, 1892, Mrs. E. P. Knox conveyed the entire land lot to Henry Strickland.

On August 9, 1892, Strickland conveyed property including the eastern portion of the land lot to Elizabeth Sudderth, who is appellees’ predecessor-in-title. A recital in this deed conveyed to the grantee “a good and sufficient right of way for roads to river fractions where the present road is and is to give others right of way to their fractions over the same road or continuations of the same.” The river referred to in this deed is the Chattahoochee River.

On August 25, 1892, Strickland conveyed property including the western portion of the land lot to Abi Wheeler, who is the Glasses’ predecessor-in-title. A recital in that deed gives Wheeler, her heirs, and assigns “a good and sufficient right of way for road to river fractions over the same road, or a continuation of the same.”

On January 15, 1926, the administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Sudderth conveyed the eastern portion of the land lot to H. A. Moore. The deed recites that the property had been surveyed by the county surveyor in March 1892 and that a plat prepared pursuant to this survey was recorded in the clerk’s office. A handwritten recital in the margin of the deed, after being corrected for obvious scrivener’s errors, conveyed to the grantee “a good and sufficient right of way for road to river fractions where the road was on August 9, 1892,” and gave “others right of way to their fractions over the same road or continuation of same as specified in the deed from Henry Strickland to Abi Wheeler.”

After 1926, there are no recitals in the deeds within the Glasses’ chain of title referring to roadway easements.

The property currently owned by appellees was conveyed by Dr. Donovan Jones to Arthur F. Rees IV, on April 8, 1968. The deed referred to a 1954 plat showing the eastern half of Land Lot 285, and it designated as a public road running in a north-south direction an area which other plats show to be Settles Bridge Road; it also designated a public road extending in a westerly direction from the north-south public road. The property lying within this area is excepted from the conveyance under the following recital in the deed: “Less and except that portion of the above-described property lying within the right of way lines of any public road located on said property.”

Settles Bridge Road had been used as a public road since at least 1955. It is the only road in Land Lot 285 which runs in a northerly direction to the Chattahoochee River. Hutchins Ferry Road runs in a *630 northeasterly direction from the Glasses’ property through the Rees farm where it intersects Settles Bridge Road. The road identified as Hutchins Ferry Road has also been known as Hutchins Farm Road, and the names appear to be used interchangeably. The Glasses use Hutchins Ferry Road/Settles Bridge Road as the only existing access to their home, although their larger tract does have frontage on a public road which is more than one-half mile from their home.

Two experts testified on behalf of the appellants that the deeds within the Glasses’ chain of title expressly grant them an appurtenant easement over appellees’ property.

One expert, Sidney Calloway, testified on behalf of Charlock that the county had acquired fee-simple title to the roadbed, in that there had been a dedication of the road for public use and the roadbed had been excepted from the conveyance to Rees by Donovan under a “less and except” clause in their deed. Where, as here, a road is established by dedication and there is no express grant of fee-simple title, an easement results. The “less and except” clause merely recognized the existence of this easement.

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Bluebook (online)
398 S.E.2d 7, 260 Ga. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glass-v-carnes-ga-1990.