Hasty v. Wilson

158 S.E.2d 915, 223 Ga. 739, 1967 Ga. LEXIS 682
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 20, 1967
Docket24251, 24258
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 158 S.E.2d 915 (Hasty v. Wilson) 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
Hasty v. Wilson, 158 S.E.2d 915, 223 Ga. 739, 1967 Ga. LEXIS 682 (Ga. 1967).

Opinion

Undercoeleer, Justice.

This is an action to enjoin the closing of an alley. It is in four counts claiming an easement on the basis of (1) express grant, (2) adverse use for more than seven years, (3) way of necessity, and, (4) public use and dedication. *741 The court sustained general demurrers to Counts 1, 3, and 4, and granted summary judgment to the defendants on Count 2. The plaintiff appeals to this court enumerating as error the rulings on the general demurrers, on certain special demurrers, on the grant of the summary judgment and on the admissibility of certain evidence. The defendants cross appeal enumerating as error the admission of certain evidence.

Without elaborating on the niceties of the legal distinction between easements in gross and easements appurtenant, we hold the question involved herein to concern the latter. See Stovall v. Coggins Granite Co., 116 Ga. 376 (42 SE 723).

On the hearing of the motion for summary judgment on Count 2, the essential facts show that the plaintiff is the owner of the Imperial Hotel property which fronts 70 feet on the east side of Peachtree Street in Atlanta. The defendants hold title to the property on the north side thereof to Forrest Avenue. The alley in dispute runs north 90 feet from the rear of the Imperial Hotel property, approximately parallel to Peachtree Street, through the defendants’ property to Forrest Avenue. The alley is 13.6 feet in width, well defined, with stone walls along a portion of it and paved with large stone blocks set on a sand foundation. The alley has been of the same size and in its present location since about 1937 and used by the various owners of the Imperial Hotel, their tenants, and the public from that time; since 1951 the owners of the hotel have made extensive repairs on the alley and its walls openly and notoriously each year; prior to 1951 the evidence is conflicting as to repairs that were made.

About 1944 Emory University sold the hotel property to the Imperial Hotel Company. On March 1, 1951, the Imperial Hotel Company sold the hotel property to the Imperial Investment Co., Ltd., a limited partnership. Sometime prior to 1951, the property north of the hotel property was purchased by Fred B. Wilson, defendants’ predecessor in title. On October 31, 1963, the Imperial Investment Co., Ltd., conveyed the property and the easement in the alley to the plaintiff, James R. Hasty, previously designated as a limited partner of the Imperial Investment Co., Ltd.

*742 Glenn S. Loudermilk, designated as general partner of tire Imperial Investment Co., Ltd., individually leased the Imperial Hotel with the exception of the “Blue Room” on March 1, 1948, from the Imperial Investment C’o., Ltd.’s predecessor in. title and shortly thereafter, the exact date not appearing- in the record, assigned the lease to the Imperial Operating Co., Inc., which continued the operation under its lease until its expiration on September 30, 1958. Glenn S. Loudermilk was the sole stockholder of the Imperial Operating Co., Inc.

From prior to 1949 until October 1, 1957, Glenn S. Louder-milk individually leased the property north of the hotel property and east of the alley together with the right to use said alley. Beginning October 1, 1957, he leased from Fred B; Wilson for a period of 10 years including renewal options all property north of the hotel property and at the time of the filing of this suit was still a tenant of said property.

“While a right of private way over another’s land may arise by prescription from seven years’ uninterrupted use through improved lands (Code §§ 85-1401, 83-112; Rogers v. Wilson, 171 Ga. 802 (4) (156 SE 817)), where, as in this case, a private way is claimed by prescription, the party setting up such claim must bring himself strictly within the requirements of the law (Nott v. Tinley, 69 Ga. 766); and in order to set up such prescriptive right of way, it is essential that the prescriber show, not only that he has been in the uninterrupted use thereof for seven years or more, that it does not exceed fifteen feet [now 20 feet (Ga. L. 1953, Nov. Sess., p. 98) ] in width, and that it is the same number of feet originally appropriated, but also that he has kept it open and in repair during such period. Woolbright v. Cureton, 76 Ga. 107; Collier v. Farr, 81 Ga. 749 (7 SE 860); Aaron v. Gunnels, 68 Ga. 528; Hall v. Browning, 195 Ga. 423, 424 (1) (24 SE2d 392).” Burton v. Atlanta & W. P. R. Co., 206 Ga. 698 (1) (58 SE2d 424).

“Prescription is the right to property which a possessor acquires by reason of the continuance of his possession for a period of time fixed by law. Such possession to be the foundation of a prescription must be in the right of the possessor, and not of another, and must be public, continuous, exclusive, un *743 interrupted, and peaceable, and be ‘accompanied by a claim of right.’ Code §§ 85-401, 85-402. ‘Adverse possession is usually a mixed question of law and fact — whether the facts exist which constitute adverse possession, is for the jury to judge. Whether, assuming the facts proven to be true, they constitute adverse possession, is for the court to decide.’ Thompson v. Fonts, 203 Ga. 522 (2) (47 SE2d 571). An inchoate prescriptive title may be transferred by the possessor to a successor, so that the successive possessions may be tacked to make out the prescription. Code § 85-416.” Olsen v. Noble, 209 Ga. 899, 904 (76 SE2d 775). The claim of right or title may be evidenced by acts or conduct in relation to the property possessed which are inconsistent with the true owner’s title. Ewing v. Tanner, 184 Ga. 773, 780 (193 SE 243); Allen v. Allen, 196 Ga. 736, 744 (2) (27 SE2d 679); Collier v. Farr, 81 Ga. 749, 753, supra; Nassar v. Salter, 213 Ga. 253, 255 (98 SE2d 557). In other words, the plaintiff’s claim of prescriptive title is dependent upon whether or not he and his predecessor in title, the Imperial Investment Co., Ltd., were adversely using the alley under a claim of right. Olsen v. Noble, 209 Ga. 899, 905, supra; Cook v. Gammon, 94 Ga. 298 (20 SE 332).

The defendant raises the question that the Imperial Investment Co., Ltd., acquired no prescriptive rights in the alley for the reason that Glenn S. Loudermilk was the sole general partner of the Imperial Investment Co., Ltd., and that since he was leasing individually a portion of the adjoining property including the right to use the alley during the time he was such' sole general partner, prescription could not run in favor of the partnership while he was in such possession.

The defendant then argues that since Glenn S. Loudermilk’s interest as sole general partner terminated on January 1, 1958, and the Imperial Operating Company’s lease expired on September 30, 1958, the plaintiff has not had the required statutory 7 years’ possession since that time which is necessary to establish a prescriptive right in the alley as a matter of law.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.E.2d 915, 223 Ga. 739, 1967 Ga. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasty-v-wilson-ga-1967.