Mosteller Mill, Ltd. v. Georgia Power Co.

609 S.E.2d 211, 271 Ga. App. 287, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 228, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 18, 2005
DocketA04A2392
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 609 S.E.2d 211 (Mosteller Mill, Ltd. v. Georgia Power Co.) 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
Mosteller Mill, Ltd. v. Georgia Power Co., 609 S.E.2d 211, 271 Ga. App. 287, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 228, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 25 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Presiding Judge.

On May 30, 2003, Georgia Power Company filed a petition to condemn an easement 150 feet wide for an electric transmission line across three tracts of land containing approximately 800 acres and owned by Mosteller Mill, Ltd. in Bartow County. 1 A special master appointed by the trial court conducted a hearing and received evidence concerning, among other things, the need for the easement and the value of the property involved. Following the hearing, the special master returned an award of $134,100 as compensation for the easement to be acquired and consequential damages to the remainder of Mosteller Mill’s property. Mosteller Mill filed a notice of appeal and exceptions to the special master award, seeking a review of rulings made by the special master as to certain nonvalue issues and seeking a jury trial on the value of the taking. The trial court held a hearing on the exceptions, denying ten of the thirteen exceptions. However, the trial court found that Georgia Power had failed to consider certain environmental and historical resources on Mosteller Mill’s property. The trial court set aside the special master award and set another special master hearing.

Ten witnesses, nine of whom were qualified as experts, testified at the second special master hearing. Following the hearing, the special master entered a 13-page revised award, concluding as follows:

While the routing of any 500 kV transmission line will likely affect certain environmental and historical resources, the Special Master finds that, based on the evidence and testimony presented in [the second hearing], which was not presented in [the first hearing], the Condemnor fairly and reasonably evaluated the effect of this line on these resources.

The special master awarded $134,000 as compensation and recommended that the easement be condemned upon payment of that sum into the court’s registry. Mosteller Mill again filed a notice of appeal and exceptions to the revised award. The trial court conducted a hearing on Mosteller Mill’s exceptions to the revised award and denied the exceptions. The trial court specifically found that the maintenance clause in the condemnation petition did not constitute a vague and indefinite appropriation of the property because the *288 “rights acquired must be exercised for the maintenance of the electric transmission lines.” According to the trial court, “Specification of particular activities necessary thereto do not constitute an excessive taking because there is the limitation that it must be necessary for the maintenance of the lines.” Mosteller Mill filed an interlocutory appeal in this Court, which we granted. For the reasons which follow, we reverse the trial court’s order.

1. Among other issues, the issue of first impression presented in this condemnation case is the extent to which a utility may, by perpetual easement, obtain the right to go onto nonspecific and unidentified lands adjacent to its transmission line easement in order to “cut away, remove and dispose of dead, diseased, weak or leaning trees on lands adjacent thereto [the condemned property] which may now or hereafter, in falling, strike the conductors of said lines____” The parties describe this as a “danger tree” maintenance easement. Mosteller Mill’s position is that Georgia Power must either take an interest in the lands it may use for maintenance — and pay compensation for the land — or not condemn the land at all. We agree.

The condemnation petition at issue here includes a nonspecific and undefined “danger tree” maintenance easement. Specifically, the condemnation petition allows Georgia Power to enter Mosteller Mill’s property and cut away, remove and dispose of dead, diseased, weak or leaning trees which, in Georgia Power’s sole judgment, may “now or hereafter” fall and strike Georgia Power’s transmission line conductors. This “secondary easement” seeks the unlimited right to maintain and remove timber adjacent to the transmission line easement without restrictions, qualifications or limitations. Yet the secondary easement fails to describe the condemned land for maintenance with the required specificity to convey an easement in land.

Georgia Power contends that the danger tree maintenance provision imposes specific conditions on Georgia Power, authorizing removal only if (1) the tree is dead, diseased, weak or leaning, (2) the tree is “adjacent to” the easement, and (3) the tree, in falling, would strike the conductors. Georgia Power further notes that if all these conditions are met, then the condemnation petition requires that Georgia Power must pay Mosteller Mill the fair market value of any merchantable timber cut as a result of the danger tree maintenance provision. These arguments do not excuse Georgia Power from describing the condemned land for maintenance and compensating Mosteller Mill for the condemned land.

While Georgia has not addressed the specificity requirement as applied to “danger tree” maintenance easements, the General Assembly has mandated that a condemnation petition must set forth “[t]he *289 property or interest to be taken or damaged.” 2 The Supreme Court of Georgia has consistently construed this Act to mean that a petition to condemn an easement “must describe the easement to be acquired with the same degree of definiteness as is required in a deed to land.” 3 The condemnation proceeding operates as a purchase of the land or an interest therein for a certain sum, and Mosteller Mill is entitled to have an accurate, definite description of the property it is to lose in this transaction. Nothing must be left open to the judgment or interpretation of another, not even a court. Without this, the owner of the property cannot know what portion of his land is required, the special master cannot know what damage to apprise, and the petitioner cannot know the precise boundaries of the land so as not to trespass on property not acquired.

A review of the condemnation petition in the present case shows that Georgia Power has specifically described the transmission line easement. However, Georgia Power has not sufficiently described the lands Georgia Power wishes to condemn to maintain those transmission lines. The right to “cut away, remove and dispose of dead, diseased, weak or leaning trees . . . which may now or hereafter, in falling, strike the conductors” conveys no idea of the extent of the contemplated invasion. It is not enough in a proceeding to condemn an interest in land for public purposes to describe the interest sought to be acquired so vaguely as to leave it dependent upon the undisclosed opinion of the condemning party as to the quantum of the interest which it may be deemed necessary to take. In addition, Georgia Power has no right to damage Mosteller Mill’s property without a taking that requires just compensation to the injured landowner. 4

There are a number of foreign authorities which have addressed a condemnor’s attempt to exercise rights outside a specified easement. Many of these cases require petitions for condemnation containing such clauses to be dismissed for lack of sufficient specificity. 5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
609 S.E.2d 211, 271 Ga. App. 287, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 228, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosteller-mill-ltd-v-georgia-power-co-gactapp-2005.