Wade v. Howard

499 S.E.2d 652, 232 Ga. App. 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 3, 1998
DocketA97A2594
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 499 S.E.2d 652 (Wade v. Howard) 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
Wade v. Howard, 499 S.E.2d 652, 232 Ga. App. 55 (Ga. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Smith, Judge.

This appeal presents the question of a landowner’s liability for fatal injuries caused by a falling tree. Following the three leading cases of Carter v. Ga. Power Co., 204 Ga. App. 77 (418 SE2d 379) (1992); Willis v. Maloof, 184 Ga. App. 349 (2) (361 SE2d 512) (1987); and Cornett v. Agee, 143 Ga. App. 55 (1) (237 SE2d 522) (1977), we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the landowner’s estate because the record demonstrates that the tree had no visible, apparent, or patent decay.

Plaintiff-appellants Gene E. and Nelsie I. Wade are the parents of Christopher Wade, and plaintiff-appellant Michael F. Barnsley is the father of Edward F. Barnsley. Christopher Wade and Edward Barnsley were killed by a tree that struck their car. The Wades and Barnsley (“plaintiffs”) brought this renewal action in 1995 against James C. Howard as the executor and personal representative of Grace M. Nesbitt, deceased, and five employees of DeKalb County. 1 Summary judgment in favor of the county defendants was granted in February 1996, with plaintiffs’ consent. Howard subsequently moved for summary judgment. Oral argument was heard in March 1997, and summary judgment was granted in Howard’s favor in June 1997. This appeal followed.

*56 The underlying facts are undisputéd. In June 1991, plaintiffs’ decedents were traveling in a vehicle along Briarcliff Road in unincorporated DeKalb County during or immediately after a thunderstorm. As they passed Nesbitt’s property, they were struck by a large tree that fell across the road. The tree stood on a seven- or eight-acre parcel owned by Nesbitt, since deceased. Nesbitt at the time of the incident was approximately 90 years old, was very ill and infirm, and had not lived on her property since 1988.

Howard presented evidence that Nesbitt had trees removed from her property from time to time during the 1980s. In October 1987 she hired a man to remove two trees that were dead or dying, apparently because they had been struck by lightning. At that time, Nesbitt asked a friend who was caring for her and seeing to her affairs to inspect her property for any other dead or diseased trees; he did so and found no other trees that needed cutting. This caretaker also testified that he looked at the trees along the roadway “many times” on later occasions as he walked Nesbitt’s property at her request. He specifically testified that nothing about the tree in question appeared unusual. The base of the tree was over 20 feet from the roadway, behind a fence, and across a steep gully in a heavily overgrown area of the property. Before the tree fell, the base of the tree was invisible because it was covered with heavy overgrowth and vines. The tree grew towards the sun over the roadway “like many do on Briarcliff Road, hundreds of them.” The caretaker observed the fallen tree while it was being cut up and there were no dead limbs on it; it was “just healthy on the outside, and this is what baffled everybody, you know.” “So far as I could determine there was nothing visible that would have indicated ... if you’d have gone up and looked at it close, . . . that it was [a] bad tree.” No one ever notified him or Nesbitt of a problem with this particular tree, and if they had been notified they would have taken action.

Plaintiffs’ original expert, retained at the beginning of this litigation, personally inspected the stump of the fallen tree within six months after the incident. He provided a letter to plaintiffs’ original counsel stating that the tree was severely decayed and hollow at the base, but that “this internal defect would not have been readily apparent [to] an untrained casual observer.” While he stated that the tree appeared to have leaned over the road, predisposing it to fall in that direction, he also stated that the tree leaned and had more branches on one side because it was an “edge tree” seeking sunlight over the roadway. He stated that “[a]ll 'edge trees’ behave in this manner.” Plaintiffs dismissed that expert and the attorneys who hired him. The earliest record of service of this expert’s letter upon Howard is in 1994, in response to discovery propounded by the county defendants. The expert later provided Howard with an affida *57 vit affirming the facts recounted in his 1991 letter.

Plaintiffs apparently waited until 1997 to retain a second expert, who executed an affidavit based on 81 photographs made of the scene in 1991 and 1993. 2 But the photographs were not attached to his affidavit or to the accompanying affidavit of plaintiff Gene Wade that purported to identify the photographs. While four unidentified photographs were attached to the expert’s affidavit, he did not testify to their origin or that they were true and accurate representations of the scene depicted. Evidence was presented that the scene had changed substantially with the sale of the land and its clearing and regrading for a subdivision in 1996.

At the hearing on Howard’s motion for summary judgment, Howard objected to the affidavits. Ten days later, plaintiffs sought to amend the affidavits by revising them to add “personal knowledge” language and the photographs, and Howard again objected. The trial court refused to allow amendment of the affidavits, and plaintiffs have not argued or enumerated as error the trial court’s order denying their motion to amend the affidavits. This issue therefore is not raised on appeal, see Schill v. A.G. Spanos Dev., 217 Ga. App. 260, 262 (457 SE2d 204) (1995), and we will not consider the amended affidavits or the photographs offered with them. 3

With respect to the affidavits in their original form, it is well established that an affidavit purporting to rely on papers or other materials not attached to the affidavit or otherwise made part of the record is insufficient to create a genuine issue of fact on summary judgment. Hayes v. Murray, 252 Ga. 529, 530 (314 SE2d 885) (1984). The photographs purportedly identified in Gene Wade’s affidavit were never successfully incorporated into the record because they were not submitted until plaintiffs’ motion to amend, which was denied and not appealed. As a result, the four photographs attached to the second expert’s affidavit remain unidentified as to time, place, or origin, and no witness has testified that they are true and accurate representations of objects or events at the time of the incident. 4 While the second expert recited that he had visited the scene, he did not identify the photographs from his personal knowledge or state any *58 facts based on his inspection of the site, which in any event had altered substantially with the clearing and grading of the land in the intervening years. The second expert’s affidavit is fatally defective, as is the Wade affidavit which purported to identify unattached photographs not offered until plaintiffs’ later, unsuccessful, and unappealed motion to amend. Hayes, supra.

Plaintiffs also presented the affidavit of a neighbor who testified she believed the tree was dangerous because it leaned over Briarcliff Road.

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Bluebook (online)
499 S.E.2d 652, 232 Ga. App. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-howard-gactapp-1998.