Beamer Rentals, Inc. v. Greentree Inv. Partners, LLC.
Decision Date | 25 October 2021 |
Docket Number | A21A0857 |
Citation | 361 Ga.App. 871,864 S.E.2d 184 |
Parties | BEAMER RENTALS, INC. v. GREENTREE INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LLC. |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
Warren N. Coppedge Jr., Dalton, for Appellant.
Donald Clarence Evans Jr., Cartersville, for Appellee.
PlaintiffBeamer Rentals, Inc., appeals from the dismissal of its action for condemnation of a right of way of necessity over land owned by defendantGreentree Investment Partners, LLC.Beamer contends that the trial court erred by dismissing its complaint because (1)the trial court improperly considered evidence outside the pleading and improperly converted the dismissal into a summary judgment proceeding without proper notice or allowing discovery, (2)the trial court misinterpreted the applicable statutes — OCGA §§ 44-9-40and44-9-41 — to conclude that Beamer could not plead alternative rights of way in a single action, and (3)the trial court misconstrued the record to find that a commercial driveway exists on Greentree's property and precludes Beamer from asserting a right of way over that portion of Greentree's property.1For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
The undisputed portion of the record shows that Beamer and Greentree own adjacent parcels of land along State Route 156.The Beamer property is a .7 acre corner lot bounded by an access ramp off of Interstate 75 along the eastern border, State Route 156 along the southern border, and Greentree's property along the western and northern borders.In October 2011, Beamer had access from its southern border onto State Route 156; at that time, the Georgia Department of Transportation("DOT") condemned all roadway access to the Beamer property, paying Beamer for the taking, so that the DOT could widen Route 156 and construct certain other improvements.After the widening and controlled access improvements to Route 156, the Beamer property lacked access to Route 156 due to uninterrupted curbing and a traffic design that prohibited any curb cut into the Beamer property.
As a result of the improvements, a driveway entrance and traffic island was constructed by the DOT on Greentree's property immediately adjacent to Beamer's property.The driveway entrance is designed to handle commercial traffic, and at its narrowest point within the Greentree property, measures approximately 36 feet wide, expanding to at least double that width along Route 156 to accommodate the traffic island and a right-turn lane from the Greentree property onto Route 156.Shortly after entering the Greentree property, the driveway terminates onto the Greentree property, but there presently is no improved road or driveway served by the driveway entrance.
In July 2019, Beamer filed a complaint for a right of way of necessity, seeking to condemn a 20-foot wide portion of Greentree's property.2Attached to Beamer's complaint was Exhibit D, depicting the proposed condemned portion of property: a 20-foot wide strip of property running from the eastern border of the Beamer property out to Route 156 through the area now developed by the driveway entrance.In September 2019, Greentree filed an answer and a motion to dismiss, pointing out that Beamer's proposed route ran over and along the newly constructed 36-foot wide driveway entrance and passed over the turning lane median installed by the DOT.This, Greentree argued, rendered the proposed right of way "impossible" based on statutory and case law holding that "[p]rivate ways shall not exceed 20 feet in width."3
Later the same month, Beamer filed an amended complaint with a new route that avoided crossing over the turn-lane island and hugged the eastern 20-foot wide portion within the 36-foot wide driveway entrance.The amended complaint also proposed alternative routes seeking to minimize conflict with the driveway entrance, including a route that split into two 10-foot wide routes running within the 36-foot wide driveway entrance and allowing use of the right-turn lane onto Route 156, and a route that assumed a future dedication of the driveway to the City of Calhoun.4
In December 2019, following a hearing, the trial court entered an order ruling that while Beamer was entitled to seek a private way of necessity, such a petition was limited to proposing only one route, based on statutory language focusing on an easement or right of way in the singular.Therefore, the court struck the amended complaint, but at that time, it denied Greentree's motion to dismiss the original complaint.
In June 2020, Beamer filed a second amended complaint proposing only one route, i.e., the route that did not conflict with the turn-lane island and included only the 20-foot wide easternmost portion of the 36-foot wide driveway entrance.
In July 2020, Greentree moved to dismiss the amended complaint, again arguing that it conflicted with law requiring private ways to be no wider than 20 feet.After reviewing the ensuing responsive briefing, the trial court entered an order in November 2019 granting the motion to dismiss Beamer's second amended complaint on the ground that the proposed route must be limited to 20 feet wide, and "cannot be approximated and fixed within an existing driveway that is in excess of [20] feet...."Beamer then filed a timely notice of appeal.
1.Beamer's first argument is procedural: the trial court erred by considering evidence outside of the pleadings and converting the motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment without proper notice or opportunity for discovery.5Although it is true that Beamer opposed considering evidence outside of the pleadings and asserted its right to discovery and developing the record, the crux of the trial court's ruling rested only on the facts as characterized in Beamer's complaint and the exhibits attached thereto.And despite the fact that certain additional facts and evidence were referenced by counsel for both parties at various times, the basis for the trial court's ruling was a narrow one: the right of way as pleaded by Beamer failed to comply with the controlling statutory and case law requiring such private rights of way to be no wider than 20 feet.The ruling did not rely on any matters outside of the complaint and exhibits attached by Beamer.Accordingly, this argument presents no basis for reversal.6
2.Next, Beamer argues that the trial court erred by ruling in the December 2019 order that Beamer's first amended complaint pleading alternative rights of way within the same action was inconsistent with the statutory scheme authorizing superior courts to grant private ways.In light of the record before us, this argument affords no basis for reversal.
OCGA § 44-9-40 provides, in relevant part:
Addressing the petition itself, OCGA § 44-9-41 provides, in relevant part:
The petition shall describe the easement of private way sought to be condemned over the lands of another and shall state the distance and direction of the private way and the nature of any improvements through which the private way will go.There shall be attached to the petition or incorporated therein a plat showing the measurements and location of the private way.The petition shall state the names and addresses of all persons owning an interest in the property....
Based on the language in OCGA § 44-9-41, including phrases such as "the petition shall describe the easement ... sought," and "shall state the distance and direction of the private way ,"7the trial court ruled that any petition seeking a declaration of a private way pursuant to this statute must identify the proposed easement in the singular, and a petitioner cannot propose alternatives in the same action.
Pretermitting the correctness of this specific aspect of the court's rulings, it remains clear that all of the alternative routes proposed by Beamer are 20-foot wide portions that fall within the wider driveway entrance constructed by the DOT and running across the Greentree property.This, according to the trial court's ruling on the substance of Beamer's second amended complaint (addressed below in Division 3), would be fatal to each of the alternative routes proposed by Beamer in the various exhibits in the pleadings.Therefore, even assuming that Beamer is correct, and it could plead multiple alternatives, each of the alternatives identified by Beamer are susceptible to the same analysis on the merits.Accordingly, this procedural argument turns on the favorable resolution of that analysis, which we address in the next division.
3.Beamer's substantive challenge argues that the trial court erred by ruling that its proposed route — a 20-foot wide route that falls within the wider 36-foot wide driveway entrance — fails to meet the statutory requirement that rights of way "shall not exceed 20 feet in width."8Based on the record before us and the precedent controlling this issue, we disagree.
"[F]iling a petition pursuant to OCGA § 44-9-40 et seq. is the procedure by which an owner of landlocked real...
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