Strozzo v. Coffee Bluff Marina Property

550 S.E.2d 122, 250 Ga. App. 212, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 1925, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 676
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 12, 2001
DocketA01A0334, A01A0335
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 550 S.E.2d 122 (Strozzo v. Coffee Bluff Marina Property) 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
Strozzo v. Coffee Bluff Marina Property, 550 S.E.2d 122, 250 Ga. App. 212, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 1925, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 676 (Ga. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Miller, Judge.

Rosso Corsa Enterprises, Inc., grantee under a trustee’s deed after foreclosure, filed this quia timet petition under OCGA § 23-3-60 to establish itself as the fee simple title holder to real property commonly known as Coffee Bluff Marina, fronting on the Forrest River in Chatham County. Tony Strozzo and other property owners in the so-called Town of Rosedew asserted an express easement and also claimed a general right-of-way, alleging the land had been dedicated and accepted as a public park. Coffee Bluff Marine Rescue Squadron of America, No. 2A (MRS) also responded, claiming a prescriptive easement to a portion of the property.

The case was referred to a special master, who considered cross-motions for summary judgment and recommended that summary judgment be granted to Rosso Corsa as against the residents because as property owners they abandoned any express easement and as members of the public at large they acquired no easement. The special master further recommended that fee simple title to the entire property be established in Rosso Corsa but subject to a prescriptive easement in favor of MRS to access, use, and maintain improvements *213 it made which exceeded the scope of the original permissive use granted to it by Mrs. Phillip Falligant, Rosso Corsa’s predecessor in title. The trial court adopted the special master’s report and entered summary judgment in accordance with its recommendations. In Case No. A01A0334, the residents appeal the grant of summary judgment in favor of Rosso Corsa, and in Case No. A01A0335, Rosso Corsa appeals the grant of summary judgment establishing a prescriptive easement in favor of the MRS. 1

Case No. A01A0334

1. Appellants, as Falligant Subdivision landowners and also as members of the public at large, enumerate the grant of summary judgment against their claims to an easement. When reviewing the grant or denial of summary judgment, this Court conducts a de novo review of the law and the evidence, construing the evidence and all reasonable deductions therefrom in favor of the nonmovant. 2 Viewed in this light, the record shows the following.

According to a copy of the recorded 1887 plat of the Falligant Subdivision of the Coffee Bluff Plantation in the Town of Rosedew, Chatham County, Dr. L. A. Falligant (the common owner in appellant-residents’ chains of title) set aside Park Place East, Rosedew Park, and Park Place West from the numbered lots of the subdivision. Park Place East and West are narrow rectangular strips 30 feet wide and running approximately 480 feet south from the edge of Back Street to the low water mark of the river. Rosedew Park is approximately 80 feet wide and 480 feet long. Rosso Corsa claims only the outermost 20 feet on each side of Rosedew Park because in 1955, Phillip L. Falligant deeded to Chatham County a right-of-way to the middle 40 feet for an extension of Coffee Bluff Road, and the City of Savannah has since annexed the property.

It is undisputed that the 1887 plat is referred to in subsequent deeds to various lots in the Falligant Subdivision, including Rosso Corsa’s deed from the trustee. There is also evidence that, while the park was originally intended exclusively for Rosedew residents, the general public has used the bluff and beach for recreational purposes, at least since the 1920s. Either the county or the city once built a boat ramp at the water’s edge, but since at least 1976 that *214 ramp was condemned and access to it blocked by a fence. Only remnants of the paving for the extension of Coffee Bluff Road remain. Since 1972, a chain-link fence along the northern portion blocks all entrance to the property except an opening to a privately operated marina, erected by Rosso Corsa’s predecessor in title. The property is not posted as a public park nor maintained by any local government.

(a) Members of the public at large. “After an owner dedicates land to public use either expressly or by his actions and the land is used by the public for such a length of time that accommodation of the public or private rights may be materially affected by interruption of the right to use such land, the owner may not afterwards appropriate the land to private purposes.” 3 Nevertheless, an easement in favor of the public may be voluntarily abandoned. 4 The time sufficient to raise the presumption of abandonment of land accepted for public use generally follows the 20-year prescriptive period. 5 While there is evidence that a small portion of the public has used the so-called park for recreational purposes since a “ ‘time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary!,] ’ ” 6 yet the evidence is undisputed that any acceptance by the public at large has been abandoned because for more than 20 years the governing authority has fenced and locked the access to the condemned and unsafe public ramp rather than repair or maintain that ramp or the park itself. The trial court correctly granted summary judgment to Rosso Corsa on appellants’ claims based on their being members of the public at large.

(b) Assigns of Dr. Falligant. “It is well established that when property is subdivided and a conveyance is made according to a recorded plat, the purchaser acquires an easement in areas set aside for the purchaser’s use.” 7 The recorded plat here is evidence that Rosedew Park and its adjacent areas were expressly dedicated to the subdivision property owners. 8 Mere nonuse of an easement acquired by deed, for a period however long, will not amount to an abandonment. 9 So any current property owner whose deed incorporates the 1887 plat by reference has an express easement in the areas set aside, 10 namely, Park Place East, Rosedew Park, and Park Place *215 West, regardless of whether there was an acceptance of the presumed dedication by the governing authority or by the public. 11 There is, in our view, no evidence other than mere nonuse that any current beneficiary of the easement demonstrated the requisite intent to abandon that interest. 12 Consequently, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment against the right-of-way claims of any appellant who is an assignee in the chain of title from Dr. Falligant or his heirs.

Case No. A01A0335

2. Rosso Corsa enumerates the trial court’s conclusion that MRS acquired a prescriptive easement in Park Place East and the eastern portion of Rosedew Park, arguing that all possession and use were permissive.

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Bluebook (online)
550 S.E.2d 122, 250 Ga. App. 212, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 1925, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strozzo-v-coffee-bluff-marina-property-gactapp-2001.