Pichulik v. Ball

607 S.E.2d 247, 270 Ga. App. 656, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3895, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 1557
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 29, 2004
DocketA04A1483
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 607 S.E.2d 247 (Pichulik v. Ball) 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
Pichulik v. Ball, 607 S.E.2d 247, 270 Ga. App. 656, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3895, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 1557 (Ga. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

The issues in this case are whether a certain easement agreement recorded in August 1983 created reciprocal easement rights in both the grantor and the grantee, whether the grantor’s successors acquired a prescriptive easement, and whether the grantor’s successors are entitled to injunctive relief. 1 The trial court determined that the easement agreement did not give the grantor property rights in the grantee’s property and that the grantor’s successors had not obtained a prescriptive easement, and denied injunctive relief to the grantor’s successors. We affirm those rulings. The trial court also dismissed claims seeking monetary damages for trespass and nuisance, without hearing evidence regarding those claims. We reverse the dismissal of those claims.

In 1982 Highland Park Center Associates (Highland Park) owned realty on North Highland Avenue. This realty consisted of three separate parcels: (1) a residential lot at 479 N. Highland Avenue, approximately 50 feet wide and 100 feet deep, having a house and paved side driveway; (2) a paved parking area directly behind the 479 *657 residential lot; and (3) a commercial parcel consisting of the North Highland Plaza and a parking lot adjacent to the Plaza. Before 1982, the residential lot at 479 and the rear paved parking area behind the residential lot comprised a single parcel. On August 15, 1983, Highland Park sold the residential lot at 479 N. Highland Avenue to Kwok Wai Tse. The same day Highland Park (as Grantor) and Tse (as Grantee) executed an “Easement Agreement” that states in part:

WHEREAS, Grantor owns real property adjacent to and adjoining the said property of the Grantee which is located immediately South and East of the property of the Grantee, a full legal description of the property subject to this easement is shown on Exhibit “B” attached hereto and incorporated herein, by this reference, and
WHEREAS, pursuant to Special Stipulation #14 of that certain real estate sales contract dated June 25, 1983 between the parties Grantor has agreed to grant, transfer and convey unto Grantee an easement for parking and ingress and egress to the rear portion of Grantee’s property ... it is agreed by and between the Grantor and the Grantee as follows:
1. Grant of Easement. Grantor, its agents, employees, successors and assigns hereby grant to the Grantee, its agents, employees, successors and assigns, a perpetual affirmative easement for parking and ingress and egress, without limitation, on and across the property of the Grantor described in Exhibit “B” hereof for use by the Grantee for vehicular and pedestrian traffic into and out of the aforesaid property of Grantee, during the use by the Grantee, its tenants, successors and invitees.
2. Non-exclusive Use. The use by both the Grantee and the Grantor shall be non-exclusive.
3. Obstructions. The Grantor and the Grantee agree not to obstruct, impede, or interfere, one with the other, in the reasonable use of this easement for the purpose of parking and ingress and egress to and from the respective properties.

After Highland Park and Tse executed the agreement, it was duly recorded.

From 1983 until 1993, Tse owned the 479 N. Highland residential lot and leased the residence to tenants. Tse’s tenants parked in *658 the rear, the easement area. After Tse’s ownership ended, the 479 N. Highland property had several different owners. In February 2002, the house on 479 N. Highland burned down, and on July 19, 2002, Stephen A. Ball purchased the residential property.

Meanwhile, in 1986, three years after selling the 479 residential property to Tse, Highland Park sold its other two parcels, i.e., the commercial property and the easement area at the rear of the 479 residential property to Rubin Pichulik, Louis Pichulik, and Ana Eda Pichulik Zucor, who continue to own the property now through a partnership. 2 In 2002, when Ball purchased the residential parcel at 479 N. Highland, the Pichuliks were renting the commercial property to four restaurants.

There are two curb cuts to the parties’ property on North Highland Avenue, one at the commercial property and the other at the driveway at the 479 residential property. In 1995, several years before Ball acquired the 479 residential property, the Pichuliks paid $11,578 to a paving company to resurface and pave the main commercial parking lot, the driveway on 479, and the easement area behind the 479 property. The contractor also re-striped the parking slots. Painted on the pavement near the curb cut closer to the commercial property was a yellow ingress arrow, and an egress arrow was painted on the section of the paved driveway nearest the other curb cut at the 479 property. Louis Pichulik testified that “all the years we had the property... [people] followed those arrows.” As Ball likewise acknowledged in his appellate brief, “[generally, since 1983 any person going to 479 North Highland and/or the Commercial Lot would enter through the curb cut closest to the buildings on the Commercial Lot and exit on the curb cut closest to 479 North Highland.” In other words, drivers entering or leaving either property would use the driveway at the commercial property for ingress and would use the driveway at the residential property for egress.

A few years before Ball’s purchase of the 479 property, the Pichuliks’ restaurant tenants had begun using a valet parking service to accommodate their customers. The valet service parked cars in the commercial parking lot and also in the easement area behind 479, parcels owned by the Pichuliks.

Shortly after Ball’s purchase of the residential lot at 479, then consisting mainly of the burnt remnants of the house, Ball began to challenge the Pichuliks’ use of the driveway on 479 and to dispute what Ball perceived as the Pichuliks’ interference with his use and *659 control over the easement area. To prevent the Pichuliks and their tenants from using the driveway on 479, Ball erected yellow caution tape, placed warning signs, and positioned debris including toilets, dirt, an abandoned trailer, and trash there. He also parked vehicles in a manner to obstruct access to the easement area.

As a result of Ball’s actions, the Pichuliks filed suit against Ball, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief and damages for trespass, deprivation of a right of enjoyment, and nuisance. The Pichuliks claimed an interest over the driveway on 479 under two alternative theories: a “common driveway” for ingress and egress to their property or a prescriptive right to use the driveway. They also sought injunctive relief requiring Ball to remove the obstructions placed on the driveway at 479.

Contending that the Pichuliks had only permissive use of his property, Ball counterclaimed for damages. Ball asserted that he had “revoked the permissive use of his Property.” Contrary to the Pichuliks’ claim to rights to use his property for ingress, egress, and parking, Ball countered that they had no such rights and that they were interfering with his rights to the easement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
607 S.E.2d 247, 270 Ga. App. 656, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3895, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 1557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pichulik-v-ball-gactapp-2004.