Leach v. Georgia Power Company

183 S.E.2d 755, 228 Ga. 16, 1971 Ga. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 8, 1971
Docket26601
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 183 S.E.2d 755 (Leach v. Georgia Power Company) 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
Leach v. Georgia Power Company, 183 S.E.2d 755, 228 Ga. 16, 1971 Ga. LEXIS 452 (Ga. 1971).

Opinion

Almand, Chief Justice.

This appeal is from judgments in a condemnation proceeding under the 1957 Special Master Act (Code Ann. Ch. 36-6A), overruling several motions of the condemnee and granting to the condemnor an easement or right of way for the construction and maintenance of "electric transmission and distribution lines with towers, *18 frames, poles and other necessary facilities in connection therewith.”

The case originated when Georgia Power Company, a corporate utility supplying electric power to the public, sought to condemn an easement or right of way across a described tract of land of C. McNeill Leach and Mildred Kingloff in Fulton County, for the purpose of erecting and maintaining electric transmission and distribution lines. The petition to condemn was brought under the provisions of the 1957 Special Master Act (Code Ann. Ch. 36-6A) and referred to a named attorney as special master for a hearing and report.

The condemnees filed their answers and legal defenses.

The condemnor filed an amendment to its petition wherein it amended (a) the description of the right of way sought to be condemned, and (b) the use to be made of the right of way.

After a hearing before the special master, he made and filed his report in which he fixed the market value of the property sought to be condemned and reported his overruling of six motions of the condemnees which raised questions of law.

Upon the filing of the special master’s report, the condemnees filed a motion in the superior court to recommit the report on the claim that the special master had failed to rule on several defenses. They also filed exceptions of law and fact to the special master’s report, most of the exceptions being upon the alleged failure of the special master to make a ruling on several special defenses.

The condemnees also filed in the case a petition for a mandamus absolute to require the special master to certify that the facts set out in their exceptions of fact to the special master’s report were true.

They also .filed their appeal to a jury in the superior court from the special master’s award as to the value of the property sought to be condemned.

The special master in his response to the mandamus rule nisi stated that he was not required under the provisions of *19 the Special Master Act to certify that certain exceptions of fact filed by the condemnees were true or false.

After a hearing on the various motions enumerated above, the court entered two orders. First, it denied the motion to recommit; denied a mandamus absolute; denied the condemnees’ motion for a summary judgment; and overruled and denied the exceptions. of law and fact to the special master’s report and award. Second, it entered a judgment decreeing the absolute title to the condemnor in and to an easement over the described tract of land of the condemnees for the construction of one or more electric conductors.

Notice of appeal was filed from both judgments.

Error is enumerated on several grounds. Many of the grounds are repetitious and can be consolidated and passed upon in one ruling.

The appeal was to the Court of Appeals and was transferred to the Supreme Court. Held:

The condemnor has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that orders appealed from are not final judgments from which appeals can be entered under the Appellate Practice Act of 1965 as amended, there being no certificate by the trial judge for an immediate appeal.

After the special master had filed his report, the condemnees filed their petition for a mandamus absolute directed to the special master. A rule nisi was issued, a response was filed, and the court, after a hearing, refused to grant the writ. This denial was subject to appeal and review by this court and gives the court jurisdiction to review this order along with the other enumerations of error.

In its petition for condemnation the condemnor described the easement and right of way across the tract of land owned by the condemnees as being 100 feet in width. It was described by metes, bounds and distances. There was also a description of the uses to which the right of way would be put, and of the construction of poles, wires, etc., by the condemnor.

Subsequently, the condemnor amended its petition by *20 striking two paragraphs describing the proposed right of way and the uses of the right of way, and stating two new paragraphs. These two new paragraphs made more definite and specific the description of the right of way and how it would be used.

The contention by the condemnees is that when the condemnor struck the two paragraphs of the original petition, this left the petition without any description of the land sought to be condemned, and that the petition could not be amended.

This contention is without merit. All that the amendment did was to put the condemnees on notice of a more specific description of the right of way sought to be condemned and the proposed use of the right of way. The petition was amendable for such purposes. B. & W. Hen Farm v. Ga. Power Co., 222 Ga. 830 (152 SE2d 841).

One of the objections to the condemnation passed upon by the special master was that the description of the right of way or easement sought was too indefinite and uncertain to acquaint the condemnees with property sought to be condemned.

A further objection was that the allegations in the petition were not stated with sufficient certainty and definiteness to enable the condemnees to know the extent of the rights sought to be taken and the uses to be made by the condemnor of the right of way.

The condemnation petition described with definiteness and certainty the entire tract of the condemnees’ land through which the condemnor sought a right of way one hundred feet in width, which was described in metes, bounds and distances.

There was a minute description as to the construction of poles, lines, etc., for the transmission of electric current from the condemnor’s transmission line on the south side of the condemnees’ tract of land to the substation of the City of East Point on the north of said tract. Attached to the petition was a plat showing with definiteness the property sought to be condemned.

*21 The objections interposed were properly overruled.

The special master in his report stated the rulings he had made on certain motions and objections. The condemnees filed a motion to recommit the report for his failure to make certain rulings and findings in his award and for his failure to file a brief of the evidence adduced before him.

Exceptions of law and fact were also made to the special master’s report.

The condemnees by their petition for the writ of mandamus sought to require the special master to certify certain facts as true.

In support of their enumerations of error on these several related matters ruled on by the trial judge, the condemnees cite Section 6 of the Special Master Act

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.E.2d 755, 228 Ga. 16, 1971 Ga. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-georgia-power-company-ga-1971.