JOHN W. TUCKER v. BRANNEN LAKE EAST, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 29, 2024
DocketA23A1265
StatusPublished

This text of JOHN W. TUCKER v. BRANNEN LAKE EAST, LLC (JOHN W. TUCKER v. BRANNEN LAKE EAST, LLC) 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
JOHN W. TUCKER v. BRANNEN LAKE EAST, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, P. J., RICKMAN and PIPKIN, 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. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

January 29, 2024

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A1265. TUCKER et al v. BRANNEN LAKE EAST, LLC.

DILLARD, Presiding Judge.

Brannen Lake East, LLC—the owner of Brannen Lake and much, but not all,

of the property surrounding the lake—filed a declaratory judgment action against John

Tucker and Burney Marsh—owners of property next to the lake—to determine

whether it had the right to restrict their use of the lake. Following an evidentiary

hearing, the trial court ruled in favor of BLE. Tucker and Marsh appeal, contending

the trial court erred in doing so because the deed to their property established an

easement for use of the lake by express grant. For the following reasons, we agree and

reverse. A trial court’s findings of fact after a declaratory-judgment hearing are

“analogous to a jury verdict and will not be interfered with if there is any evidence to

support them”;1 but we review the trial court’s conclusions of law de novo.2 So viewed,

the record shows that on May 7, 2015, Tucker and Marsh purchased property on

Brannen Lake in Statesboro—located at 1000 Brannen Lake Road—from Irvin

Brannen, III; Roy Pilgrim Otwell, III; Caroline Otwell Harless; Matthew Williamson;

Jonathan Williamson; and Irvin Brannen, Jr., Family Limited Partnership. The

warranty deed conveying the property described the tract as follows:

All that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in the 45th G.M. District of Bulloch County, Georgia[,] being Lot 6 according to a plat of Brannen Lake prepared by Lamar O Reddick and Associates, Registered Surveyors, dated June 24, 1993[,] and recorded in Plat Book 41, Page 80, Bulloch County records. The aforesaid plat and description thereon are hereby incorporated by reference and made a part hereof.

1 Strange v. Towns, 330 Ga. App. 876, 876 (769 SE2d 604) (2015) (punctuation omitted); accord Bank of the Ozarks v. DKK Dev. Co., 315 Ga. App. 539, 540 (726 SE2d 608) (2012). 2 See Strange, 330 Ga. App. at 876 (punctuation omitted); accord Bank of the Ozarks, 315 Ga. App. at 540. 2 The June 24, 1993 plat referenced in Tucker and Marsh’s warranty deed is a

subdivision plat for Lots 1, 3-13, 15, and 16 of Brannen Lake, and the plat depicts the

lake as being contiguous with those other lots in the subdivision, including Lot 6—the

lot which Tucker and Marsh own. Notably, the Brannen Lake subdivision plat and a

survey of Lot 6—both of which were recorded in the Bulloch County records—did

not place any restrictions on access or use of Brannen Lake. In addition, the property

included a house and a five-tier dock on the lake. And over the course of the next six

years, Tucker and Marsh boated on and otherwise used the lake on nearly a daily basis.

On January 31, 2022, BLE purchased Brannen Lake, as well as a significant

amount of property on the east side of the lake, from Caroline Otwell Harless and Roy

Otwell, III—two of the former owners of Tucker and Marsh’s property. In late March

of that same year, Cecil Kennedy—BLE’s principal and managing member—was

boating on the lake with his family when he became involved in a heated argument

with Tucker, who was also boating, regarding whether the motor on Kennedy’s boat

exceeded the horsepower of those normally permitted for use. One week after this

confrontation (on March 30, 2022), BLE’s counsel sent Tucker and Marsh a letter,

noting that their 2015 deed did not convey any rights to the lake; that a 1987 deed in

3 their chain of title incorporated covenants restricting use of the lake and provided the

lake’s owners with the power to control access; and therefore, as current owners of

Brannen Lake, BLE was terminating their access effective immediately.

Despite this letter, Tucker and Marsh continued using the lake. And as a result,

on June 24, 2022, BLE filed a declaratory-judgment action against them, seeking a

determination of whether it had the right to restrict their use of the lake. Tucker and

Marsh filed a response, and on September 7, 2022, the trial court began an evidentiary

hearing on the matter, but continued it after BLE’s two witnesses testified so the

parties could attempt mediation. Several months later, after mediation was

unsuccessful, the court resumed the hearing, during which Tucker and Marsh’s

witnesses testified, and they claimed to have an express easement to use the lake as a

result of the subdivision plat referenced in their warranty deed. At the conclusion of

the hearing, the trial court took the matter under advisement. But one month later, it

issued an order ruling that Tucker and Marsh’s deed only provided an implied license

subject to revocation, rather than an easement, and so BLE’s letter to them after the

confrontation terminated that license. This appeal follows.

4 In their sole enumeration of error, Tucker and Marsh contend the trial court

erred in ruling that BLE could restrict their access to Brannen Lake, arguing the deed

to their property incorporating the subdivision plat established an easement for use of

the lake by express grant. We agree.

Generally speaking, an easement is “an interest in land owned and possessed

by another.”3 And Georgia law has long recognized that when a developer “conveys

lots with reference to a subdivision plat, the grantees may receive easements in certain

features—mostly streets and parks—that are designated on the plat.”4 Indeed, for a

small category of features, “designating them appropriately on the subdivision plat is

enough, absent contrary evidence based in the plat or deed, to demonstrate clear

3 WS CE Resort Owner, LLC v. Holland, 315 Ga. 691, 694 (2) (a) (884 SE2d 282) (2023); see Rahn v. Pittman, 216 Ga. 523, 524 (1) (118 SE2d 85) (1961) (holding that a property right was created when grantee’s deed referred to subdivision plat showing right of way); Hollomon v. Bd. of Ed. of Stewart Cnty., 168 Ga. 359, 364 (147 SE 882) (1929) (explaining that “[a]n easement is a right in the owner of one parcel of land, by reason of such ownership, to use the land of another for a special purpose not inconsistent with the general property in the owner” (citation and punctuation omitted)). 4 Holland, 315 Ga. at 695 (2) (a); see Stanfield v. Brewton, 228 Ga. 92, 94-95 (1) (a)-(b) (184 SE2d 352) (1971) (explaining that when “the owners of a tract of land subdivide it into lots, record a map or plat showing such lots, with designated streets and a public park, and sell lots with reference to such map or plat,” the purchasers “have an easement in these public areas”). 5 intent to grant an easement in the features to lot owners who bought with reference

to the plat.”5 Importantly, the decisions of the Supreme Court of Georgia have

included in this category “(1) streets designated and laid out on the subdivision plat;

(2) parks; and (3) lakes, which we have equated to parks.”6 These features share two

things in common with the first being that there is “simply a well-settled

understanding, reflected in more than a century of our decisions, that when these basic

features are designated on a subdivision plat, there is ordinarily no reason to doubt

that they are included as part of the unified plan for the subdivision and meant for the

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Related

Stanfield v. Brewton
184 S.E.2d 352 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1971)
Hendley v. Overstreet
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Patterson v. Powell
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Higgins v. Odom
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Roth v. Connor
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Walker v. Duncan
223 S.E.2d 675 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1976)
Rahn v. Pittman
118 S.E.2d 85 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1961)
Second Refuge Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Inc. v. Lollar
653 S.E.2d 462 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2007)
Bank of the Ozarks v. DKK Development Co.
726 S.E.2d 608 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2012)
Grave De Peralta v. Blackberry Mountain Ass'n
726 S.E.2d 789 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2012)
STRANGE v. TOWNS Et Al.
769 S.E.2d 604 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2015)
Hollomon v. Board of Education
147 S.E. 882 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1929)
Gamble v. Brooks
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Goodson v. Ford
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