Harvey v. Lindsey

554 S.E.2d 523, 251 Ga. App. 387, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2748, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 1025
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 27, 2001
DocketA01A1236
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 554 S.E.2d 523 (Harvey v. Lindsey) 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
Harvey v. Lindsey, 554 S.E.2d 523, 251 Ga. App. 387, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2748, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 1025 (Ga. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

Larry O. Harvey and Patricia O’Quinn Harvey (collectively Harvey) filed an application for contempt against Jo Edith Lindsey and R. M. Hightower. Harvey alleged that Lindsey and Hightower had wilfully and intentionally violated a court order issued in November 1999 that set forth guidelines for certain easements in which Harvey and Lindsey shared a joint interest. The trial court denied the application, finding Lindsey not in wilful violation of its order but making no finding as to Hightower.

In this appeal, Harvey contends that the trial court erred by modifying rather than clarifying its earlier order, by applying an incorrect standard to find that Lindsey was in nonwilful contempt of the order, and by failing to address the question of Hightower’s contempt. Only the last issue has any merit.

Jo Edith Lindsey and Patricia O’Quinn Harvey are sisters. After their father, E. O. Rutland, died in 1986, each inherited various tracts of land from his estate. Lindsey inherited a 129.55-acre farm off Rutland Road in Tift County. Their sister, Frankie Esther Homer, inherited a 100.5-acre farm that adjoins the Lindsey farm on its north side, and Patricia Harvey inherited a 23.5-acre tract that borders the south side of the Lindsey farm. About five years before his death, Rutland had conveyed another tract consisting of fifty acres which borders the west side of the Lindsey farm. Rutland conveyed the 50-acre parcel to Larry O. Harvey, the husband of Patricia O’Quinn Harvey, Bobby Lindsey, the spouse of Jo Edith Lindsey, and also to Wayne Franks, Henry Rutland, and Charles Kent, Jr. Each obtained an undivided one-fifth interest. Both the 50-acre tract and the 23.5-acre tract are landlocked. Under the distribution of assets of *388 E. O. Rutland’s estate, a connection of field and nonfield roads bordering on and meandering over portions of the Homer and Lindsey farms comprise easements for ingress and egress to the 50- and 23.5-acre parcels.

After Lindsey erected two gates and allowed her neighbor, R. M. Hightower, to install a satellite dish within the easement area, Harvey sued for the removal of these obstructions. The trial court entered an order permitting Lindsey to maintain gates inside the easement as long as she provided access keys to Harvey. The court also found that Hightower’s satellite dish did not impair the easement. That order was appealed, and we reversed, finding the obstructions constituted unauthorized encumbrances upon the dominant tenement’s easement belonging to Harvey. 1

On remand, the trial court issued an order in November 1999 that provides:

All easements of record, traditional easements as well as those easements perpetual in nature, shall remain unobstructed with rights of use to those persons to whom an easement has been granted as well as those passing over said properties via said easements with permission of the parties hereto or those persons to whom said easement has been granted.

The order states that

the general maintenance, upkeep and repair of said easements shall be the joint responsibility of the owner of the fee upon which said easements are located and those with easement rights, and they shall be equally responsible for cost and materials needed to maintain the same in the condition suitable for its intended use as a travel way to and from properties owned by the respective parties.

The order also directs that “[n]o gates or other access control devices shall be erected over any of the said easements,” and it required the removal of the satellite dish within 30 days. The order also obligated Lindsey to complete within 60 days any and all repairs to easements made “impassable” by “ditches, drainage ways and erosion caused by the diversion of water or other intentional or negligent destruction of easements. . . .”

*389 More than 60 days later, dissatisfied with the responses to the order, Harvey sought to have Lindsey and Hightower found in contempt. Before conducting a hearing on the matter, in order to gain familiarity with the location and condition of the easements, the trial judge, accompanied by counsel for the parties, rode in a vehicle over the easements.

At the hearing, Bobby Lindsey, the executor of Rutland’s estate, explained that the easements had been drawn to ensure access to the 50-acre tract and the 23.5-acre tract. Thus, when the northern route that included an area prone to flooding became wet, access to the two tracts could still be accomplished via an alternate route. Bobby Lindsey testified that after part of the roadway had been washed out by rain, in part due to farming operations, he made sure that this area known as “the waterway” was reworked. Dirt and hay were used to fill some holes and to smooth out the road, and in his view, these measures seemed to solve the erosion problem. Bobby Lindsey testified that these repairs were performed within 60 days of the court order. He further testified that within 60 days of the order, both gates had been pulled back and chained to make them unusable. This allowed access to the property.

Patricia Harvey testified that she thought that the order meant for Lindsey to remove the gates and also testified that the satellite dish was not removed within 30 days of the order. In her deposition, Jo Edith Lindsey explained that she did not understand that the order required the removal of the gates. She testified that she thought that “shall be erected” meant only that she could not put up any new gates. Lindsey testified that the portion of the easement susceptible to flooding had been grassed over to prevent topsoil erosion. When asked whether the easements had been returned to their original condition, Jo Edith Lindsey responded, “[fit’s my belief that they are in better condition, shape than they’ve ever been, especially the last six years.”

In a detailed, comprehensive, seven-page order, the trial court clarified its earlier order and found that Lindsey was not in wilful violation of that order. Despite determining firsthand that the road was traversable, the court nevertheless ordered Lindsey to remove all posts and boards remaining “from where a gate previously was up.” Finding its earlier order lacking in clarity, the trial court observed that the order did not explicitly require removal of the posts, boards, and gates. The court noted, “I am not finding her in contempt for failing to do that. I did not order her to do it. The implication would be to do so. But in order to find somebody in contempt, I must find they willfully disobeyed the Court order. I don’t believe that was the case. . . .” Similarly, the trial court ordered Lindsey to remove tree limbs that were encroaching into a section of easement. *390 But the trial court “decline [d] to find Ms. Lindsey in contempt for failure to cut the limbs because the Court didn’t tell her to cut the limbs.”

1. Harvey contends that the trial court erred in issuing an order that modified rather than clarified the earlier order. Harvey argues that the November 1999 order directed that all easements be returned to their original condition at the time they were granted; whereas, the November 2000 order found “the present condition” to be sufficient.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
554 S.E.2d 523, 251 Ga. App. 387, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2748, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-lindsey-gactapp-2001.