Summary
Judgment reversed. Johnson and Blackburn, JJ., concur.
Summary
Judgment reversed. Johnson and Blackburn, JJ., concur.
Text
Ann Moceyunas, James S. Astin, for appellant.
In this suit alleging continuing nuisance and trespass, Duane West claims his property flooded repeatedly because defendants CSX Transportation and the Polk County Chapter of Georgia Rails Into Trails ("GRITS") failed to maintain drainage control on a railroad right of way that ran through West's property. CSX abandoned the line in 1988 and pulled up the rails in 1991. West's suit claims that when CSX abandoned the right of way, the drainage ditches clogged with sediment and plant growth. Removing the rails, West argues, also channeled water off the right of way and onto his property. In 1995 CSX sold the strip of land to GRITS, a nonprofit recreational group. West claims GRITS is responsible for continuing the nuisance that CSX created. The trial court granted summary judgment to GRITS and CSX. We reverse its judgment on the nuisance claims because the trial court improperly found them barred by West's failure to provide notice to the defendants and by a statute of limitation. We find that a jury should determine whether the failure of CSX and GRITS to maintain the drainage ditches created a continuing nuisance for which these defendants are responsible.
1. Notice. The trial court erred when it found West's nuisance claims barred by a failure to give CSX notice to abate the nuisance. A purchaser of property on which a nuisance exists must be given notice of the nuisance before he may be held responsible for it. OCGA
Such notice to GRITS, the purchaser, was a prerequisite to its liability for any nuisance, but the trial court erred by finding as a matter of law that no notice was given. "Notice to [a purchaser] that he will be held responsible for any damages subsequently caused by the nuisance will suffice in lieu of a specific request to abate. [Cits.]" Hoffman v. Atlanta Gas Light Co.,
2. Statute of Limitation. The trial court also erred when it found that the four-year statute of limitation for property damage barred West's claim that removing the rails, cross-ties, and ballast created or contributed to the nuisance. Whether any representative of CSX acted negligently in removing these structures is not the question; rather, the question is whether those acts created or contributed to a continuing nuisance. [1] "[E]very continuance of a nuisance which is not permanent, and which could and should be abated, is a fresh nuisance for which a new action will lie. Consequently suit may be maintained for damages growing out of a nuisance of the character indicated, where the damages were inflicted within four years before the time of filing suit, though the act which originally caused the nuisance was not done within the period of limitation of the action." (Citations, punctuation, and emphasis omitted.) Hoffman, 206 Ga. App. at 730. See also Goble v. Louisville &c. R. Co.,
With the roadbed and drainage ditches in place, West's property was subject to flooding twice a year. The railroad maintained its right of way, drainage ditches, and culverts until it abandoned the line in 1988. Sediment and plant growth then began to fill the ditches. When CSX pulled its rails in early 1991, ruts were created which channeled water from the roadbed onto West's property. Beginning in March 1991, witnesses testified, West's property adjacent to the right of way began to experience flooding, erosion, and sedimentation problems. Beavers built dams on the property, exacerbating the situation.
West's experts testified that the topography of the land naturally conducted water from West's property onto the right of way without ponding or flooding. They opined that the flooding and sedimentation which began in 1991 resulted from the railroad's failure to maintain its ditches, embankments, and culverts as well as from CSX's removal of the rails, cross-ties, and gravel.
(a) CSX's Liability. Two basic principles apply here. First, the owner of a lower tract of property owes a servitude to the owner of an adjoining higher tract and is required to receive surface waters which normally flow from the higher lot. Rinzler v. Folsom,
CSX argues that the flooding was caused by beavers, a naturally-occurring problem for which the railroad had no responsibility, and that West could have removed the beaver dams himself. See Bracey v. King,
Although the trial court's opinion does not address it, we note that a 1917 release entered between the railroad and West's predecessor in title did not relieve the railroad from responsibility for maintaining the ditches. That document did free the railroad from any duty to make its ditches any larger or create additional drainage controls. However, the release specifically provided that the railroad would continue "to the extent required by the law of Georgia as it exists in the absence of contract . . . be liable for failure to keep clear of rubbish and sediment or other like odstructions [sic] existing in ditches on its own right of way or ditches thereon widened or deepened by [West's predecessor in title]."
(b) GRITS' Liability. "[T]he maintenance of the nuisance after notice is continuance of the nuisance, and the [purchaser] of the property causing the nuisance is responsible for that continuance, if there is a request for abatement before action is filed. [Cit.]" Hoffman v. Atlanta Gas Light Co., 206 Ga. App. at 732. Given the evidence showing that West discussed the drainage problems with a GRITS representative even before GRITS purchased the property, and that GRITS did nothing to correct the drainage problems after it purchased the property, a jury must decide whether GRITS is responsible for maintaining a nuisance after notice to abate and whether its maintenance of a nuisance has damaged West.
4. Our reversal of the trial court's judgment makes it unnecessary for us to consider West's remaining enumeration.
Casey, Gilson & Williams, James E. Gilson, Sandra Gray, for appellees.
1998
Notes:
1. West has not raised, and we do not address, the propriety of summary judgment on West's negligence claims unrelated to his nuisance claims.
2. We note that neither the parties nor the court has addressed whether the nuisance is, in fact, permanent or abatable. But see Brand v. Montega Corp.,
3. West has not raised any issue of prescriptive rights. But see Brown v. Tomlinson,
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This document cites
- Supreme Court of Georgia - LAU\'S CORPORATION, INC. v. HASKINS et al., 261 Ga. 491, 405 S.E.2.d 474 (1991)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED STATES et al. v. TINSLEY MILL VILLAGE., 249 Ga. 769, 294 S.E.2.d 495
- Supreme Court of Georgia - BROWN v. TOMLINSON., 246 Ga. 513, 272 S.E.2.d 258
- Supreme Court of Georgia - CITY OF COLUMBUS, GEORGIA v. MYSZKA et al., 246 Ga. 571, 272 S.E.2.d 302 (1980)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - BRAND v. MONTEGA CORPORATION., 233 Ga. 32, 209 S.E.2.d 581 (1974)
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