Wilcox Holdings, Ltd. v. Hull

659 S.E.2d 406, 290 Ga. App. 179, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 932, 2008 Ga. App. LEXIS 265
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 7, 2008
DocketA07A2396
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 659 S.E.2d 406 (Wilcox Holdings, Ltd. v. Hull) 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
Wilcox Holdings, Ltd. v. Hull, 659 S.E.2d 406, 290 Ga. App. 179, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 932, 2008 Ga. App. LEXIS 265 (Ga. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.

Wilcox Holdings, Ltd. (Wilcox) appeals from the trial court’s grant of James M. Hull III, Windsor Square, LLC, and Hull Storey Retail Group, LLC’s (collectively “Hull”) motion for summary judgment on Wilcox’s complaint for equitable relief and damages. Wilcox petitioned for an injunction to prevent Hull from blocking two driveways across Hull’s property and also claimed damages for tortious interference with contract. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.

The undisputed evidence in the record shows that Hull owns a tract of land in Windsor Square Shopping Center, Tract C, and Wilcox owns an adjacent tract of land in the shopping center, Tract B. The *180 entrance to the shopping center from Peach Orchard Road lies entirely within Hull’s property, Tract C. 1 At the time of this lawsuit, there were two openings from Tract B across Tract C to the entrance-way. These driveways were put in by Wilcox in 1981, to give customers of the business located on Tract B a means to enter and exit the shopping center from Peach Orchard Road.

These two adjoining properties are subject to a Declaration that provides for

a permanent mutual reciprocal and non-exclusive easement, license, right and privilege of passage and use, both pedestrian and vehicular, for the purpose of ingress and egress over all roads and driveways and parking upon all parking areas located from time to time upon [both Tract B and Tract C].

The Declaration also provides that “the owners of Tracts A’, ‘B’, ‘C’ and ‘D’, respectively, shall have the right to relocate buildings, walkways and parking areas in any manner whatsoever[,] and the easement, license, right and privilege granted by this instrument shall then apply to the areas so established.”

In December 2005, Hull sent a letter to Eugene Wilcox, stating his intention of putting a curb across both openings in order to put in more parking spaces on Tract C. Wilcox then filed the instant case, petitioning the court for an injunction to prevent Hull from blocking Wilcox’s access to the entranceway. Wilcox also claimed damages for tortious interference with contract because a potential buyer for Tract B refused to go through with the sale after learning that the two means of ingress and egress were going to be blocked. Hull counterclaimed, requesting a declaratory judgment giving him the right to relocate the driveways and requesting an injunction requiring Wilcox to remove any fixtures encroaching on Hull’s property and enjoining Wilcox from any further encroachment.

Both parties moved for summary judgment. In granting Hull’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court concluded that the Declaration under which both owners purchased the property controlled the issue. The trial court rejected Wilcox’s contention that his property would be effectively “landlocked,” holding that there were alternative ways of ingress and egress for Tract B across Tract C. The trial court also held that there was no evidence that driveways on Tract C had been dedicated to public use, and no evidence to support *181 Wilcox’s claim that Hull had tortiously interfered with his contract to sell Tract B. This appeal followed.

1. In his first enumeration of error, Wilcox claims that the trial court erred in relying on SunTrust Bank v. Fletcher, 248 Ga. App. 729 (548 SE2d 630) (2001), because it does not support the trial court’s holding. Alternatively, Wilcox argues that if it is determined that the case does support the holding, SunTrust should be overruled. 2

Georgia follows the majority rule that an easement with a fixed location cannot be substantially changed or relocated without the express or implied consent of the owners of both the servient estate and the dominant estate, absent reservations contained in the instrument creating the easement.

(Emphasis supplied.) Sloan v. Rhodes, 274 Ga. 879, 879-880 (560 SE2d 653) (2002); Herren v. Pettengill, 273 Ga. 122, 123 (538 SE2d 735) (2000).

Here, there are reservations contained in the instrument creating the easement. The Declaration in this case is almost identical to the document creating the easements in SunTrust, supra. In that case, the developer conveyed to SunTrust’s predecessor in title, also a bank,

a parcel, known as Tract A, . . . together with the following easement: “a non-exclusive easement license, right and privilege of passage for pedestrians and vehicular ingress and egress over and across all portions of the common areas of the adj acent shopping center owned by Grantor____” In the same deed, the developer retained certain rights with the following words: “The adjacent property owner shall have the right to relocate buildings, walkways and parking areas in any manner whatsoever and the easement... shall then apply to the area so established.”

Id. at 730. In SunTrust, the adjacent property owner put in parking spaces which blocked the bank’s drive-through lane that emptied onto that property. SunTrust sued, claiming that the adjacent property owner was blocking its use of the property. This Court held that *182 the property owner could rearrange buildings, parking and walkways, thus forcing the Bank to rearrange its point of egress onto the adjacent property, as long as the easement was maintained. Id. at 731-733.

Likewise, in the instant case, Hull may rearrange his building and parking spaces as long as the easement is maintained. Although Wilcox claims that the business on his property will be “landlocked” if the two driveways across Tract C are closed, he later states that the effect of the closure will be that he will lose parking spaces and a drive-through window and will not have the same “usefulness and utility of the easement” as before. But, under the holding in SunTrust and the controlling Declaration, although Wilcox is entitled to an easement across Tract C so that his customers may access the entranceway, he may not dictate where the adjacent property owner may place his building, walkways or parking spaces.

2. Next Wilcox claims that there is an express easement over that portion of Tract C because the developer expressly dedicated it. In support of this claim, Wilcox points to a site plan plat that shows the entranceway as directly adjoining both Tract B and Tract C. We note that Wilcox phrased this argument differently below. There, Wilcox argued that the plat shows that “the original developer is by law presumed to have irrevocably dedicated such streets for the use of all the tract owners in the shopping center.” We do not disagree with this statement and, as previously stated above, Hull must maintain an easement over his property to this entranceway.

3. Wilcox also claims that there was an implied dedication of the easement over Tract C that was accepted by the public.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
659 S.E.2d 406, 290 Ga. App. 179, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 932, 2008 Ga. App. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-holdings-ltd-v-hull-gactapp-2008.