MIKELL, Chief Judge.
Both of these appeals turn on a dispute over whether an easement exists in a section of road abandoned by the City of Atlanta to facilitate the Atlanta Development Authority's plans for a $120 million mixed-use development,
The section of road at issue formerly was known as Harwell Street, N.W., and runs between property owned by defendants-appellants Robert N. Zywiciel and Precious J. Muhammad at what is now 19 Joseph E. Lowery Boulevard, N.W. ("19 Joseph E. Lowery"), and property owned by plaintiff-appellee Atlanta Westside Village Partners, LLC ("Atlanta Westside") and developed by plaintiff-appellee Historic Westside Village Partners, LLC ("Historic Westside") at 37 Joseph E. Lowery Boulevard, N.W. ("37 Joseph E. Lowery").
Zywiciel and Muhammad are represented by separate counsel and filed separate appeals from the trial court's denial of their motion for partial summary judgment and grant of Historic Westside's cross-motion for summary judgment. Zywiciel and Muhammad both allege that the trial court erred, inter alia, when it found: (1) that Historic Westside and Atlanta Westside have an easement; (2) that this easement was not extinguished by the actions of the City of Atlanta; and (3) that Zywiciel and Muhammad were guilty of laches in delaying their opposition to Historic Westside's and Atlanta Westside's use of the easement. Zywiciel alone asserts error as to the trial court's finding that his counterclaims fail, and additionally appeals from the trial court's grant, over both his and Muhammad's objection below, of Historic Westside's motion to add Atlanta Westside as a party plaintiff. Finally, Zywiciel alone appeals from the trial court's denial of his motions to extend discovery and for reconsideration of that denial. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in Case No. A11A1582, and in Case No. A11A1243, we affirm and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Summary judgment is warranted if the pleadings and evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
So viewed, the evidence shows that both properties descend from the same original subdivision created in 1907 by S.B. Turman & Co. and described on a plat recorded that same year by Frank and George Edmondson. The original plat shows Harwell Street as a public road. The City of Atlanta eventually acquired much of the land in the original subdivision, then in 1999 abandoned the former Harwell Street to facilitate Historic Westside's development. Atlanta Westside acquired 37 Joseph E. Lowery on November 4, 2005. Its deed does not reference the plat or the former Harwell Street. Zywiciel and Muhammad bought 19 Joseph E. Lowery on August 22, 2006, via a deed that references both the Edmondson plat and the former Harwell Street.
Historic Westside's construction of the mixed-use development lasted from November 2005 until July 2007. Both prior to and after Zywiciel and Muhammad purchased 19 Joseph E. Lowery, Historic Westside used Harwell Street to access the development property and for a storage, staging and parking area for construction vehicles. Zywiciel and Muhammad testified that they knew of the construction prior to purchasing their land, as Muhammad had been a tenant at the property since 2003. Before litigation, Muhammad complained to Historic Westside's agent, alleging trespass. The parties also quarreled over fencing. Historic Westside made unsuccessful overtures attempting to create a reciprocal use easement. Zywiciel and Muhammad unsuccessfully proposed a ground lease, attempting to require Historic Westside to pay $5,000 per month for use of the former Harwell Street as a construction
1. Muhammad, in both her first and second enumerations, claims the trial court erred in finding that an easement exists in the former Harwell Street. Upon review, we find that the trial court did not err in determining that Historic Westside and Atlanta Westside have an express easement in the former Harwell Street.
In deciding this issue, the trial court relied in large part on Northpark Assocs. No. 2, Ltd. v. Homart Dev. Co.,
Zywiciel and Muhammad's property at 19 Joseph E. Lowery and Atlanta Westside's property at 37 Joseph E. Lowery descend from the same original subdivision described on a plat recorded by the Edmondsons. An easement created by a subdivision plat is "an easement by express grant."
Muhammad challenges the trial court's finding of an express easement as error, asserting that Northpark stands for the proposition that when an express easement springs from the creation of a subdivision, property owners gain rights to that easement only if the deed by which they took their property references the subdivision plat. According to the plats themselves and a title examiner's report, the deed to the property owned by Zywiciel and Muhammad references the subdivision plat; Atlanta Westside's deed does not, but it descends in a chain of title from other deeds that reference the plat.
It is clear from the Northpark court's opinion that Northpark Associates acquired title to its land by deeds that both referred to the recorded plat and descended in a chain of title from other deeds referencing the recorded plat.
Therefore, we are bound by settled law that a trial court's grant of summary judgment must be affirmed if it is right for any reason.
Paradoxically, because both Harwell Street and the original 1907 subdivision plat are referenced in Zywiciel's and Muhammad's deed and their deed descends in a chain of title from other deeds referencing Harwell Street and the Edmondson plat, we find that they are estopped from denying the easement, even though neither the plat nor
Further, we have found that the purpose of recording a plat is to put present and future landowners on notice that an easement exists.
2. Muhammad's second enumeration additionally asserts that the trial court erred in not finding that the City of Atlanta extinguished any easement that may have existed in the former Harwell Street when it abandoned the street and then conveyed title via a deed to Atlanta Westside that does not reference the plat. The trial court, in addressing this issue, found that "[o]nce acquired, a private easement in a road is not extinguished when a county abandons the road."
3. Muhammad, in her first enumeration, also argues that Historic Westside's addition of a sidewalk and street paving changed the dimensions of the easement such that the easement was extinguished. Muhammad cites Sloan v. Sarah Rhodes, LLC,
A significant difference between Sloan and the case at bar is Sloan's reference to a servient and a dominant estate, in other words, a private easement which might "run" with the land, benefitting one parcel of real estate and burdening another. Many of the principles of law governing that type of easement do not apply to easements descended from a subdivision created by a recorded plat for the benefit of all the owners of parcels in the subdivision. There is no dominant estate. Moreover, our law does not favor the extinguishment of easements.
4. Finally, in her third enumeration, Muhammad asserts that the trial court erred in finding that laches barred her claims challenging the existence of an easement. Because we have affirmed the trial court's grant of summary judgment finding that an easement exists, Muhammad's claim of error on this point is moot.
While, like Muhammad, Zywiciel asserts error as to the trial court's finding that an easement exists, he also enumerates as error
5. In his fourth enumeration, Zywiciel claims the trial court erred in granting Historic Westside's motion to add Atlanta Westside as a party. He argues that Historic Westside was guilty of laches for waiting some 2½ years before moving to add an indispensable party, seeking to do so only after Zywiciel challenged Historic Westside's standing by alleging that only Atlanta Westside's name appears on the deed of the property claiming the easement. While Zywiciel raised standing and issues of timeliness below, the trial court did not address these, either in its order adding Atlanta Westside as a party, or in its summary judgment order or final judgment. As this court is for the correction of errors of law, if the trial court has not ruled on an issue, we will not address it.
As pointed out in Historic Westside's motion to add Atlanta Westside, this court has upheld a trial court's decision to add a party even as late as at trial, where that party was the owner of the real property at issue and, therefore, indispensable.
"The determination of whether a party should be added to a lawsuit lies within the discretion of the trial court, and that determination will not be disturbed on appeal absent a showing of abuse."
6. Zywiciel's third enumeration is that the trial court erred in denying his motions to extend discovery and to reconsider that denial, and in failing to reopen discovery as to Atlanta Westside only. Those denials, he argues, blocked his ability to participate in discovery with Atlanta Westside as a later-added party.
His motion to extend discovery, however, was filed March 30, 2009 ("March 2009 motion"), more than a year before Atlanta Westside joined the case, and refers only to Historic Westside. The motion never was amended to add Atlanta Westside, and never applied to Atlanta Westside. Zywiciel's claim of error on this issue presents nothing for our review.
The trial court ruled on Zywiciel's March 2009 motion to extend discovery on June 4, 2010, the same day it added Atlanta Westside as a party over a joint objection by Zywiciel and Muhammad. Zywiciel's counsel made an oral motion seeking reconsideration of that denial on June 14, 2010 ("June 2010 motion"). Zywiciel's oral motion for reconsideration, which he now attempts to apply to Atlanta
While the addition of a party after the discovery period has closed may have the potential to present valid scope for additional discovery, it is undisputed that the later-added Atlanta Westside shares a corporate identity with initial complainant Historic Westside, which identifies itself as a "managing member" of Atlanta Westside. Zywiciel, for more than a year and despite the trial court's grant of six joint motions to extend discovery,
"A trial court has wide discretion to shorten, extend, or reopen the time for discovery, and its decision will not be reversed unless a clear abuse of that discretion is shown."
Further, in analogous situations, this court has found no abuse of discretion when a court refuses to permit a continuance if a party has failed to make some showing of what it hoped to obtain. This is true even where, for example, the trial court held a summary judgment hearing after denying a party's motion for continuance to allow time to depose witnesses recently identified in opposing party's discovery responses as having knowledge of facts in dispute.
We find no abuse of discretion.
7. Zywiciel's first and second enumerations, in part, assert that the trial court erred in finding that an easement exists and
8. Zywiciel's first enumeration also contends that the trial court erred in finding that laches barred his claims challenging the existence of an easement. Based on our holdings in Divisions 1-3, above, we need not consider this enumeration.
9. Zywiciel, also as part of his first enumeration, argues that the trial court erred in granting Historic Westside's motion for partial summary judgment on four counterclaims he alone propounded. The trial court found that three of these counterclaims, those alleging trespass, unjust enrichment and failure to issue an injunction, fail because they depend for their survival as a matter of law on a finding that there is no easement. Zywiciel, however, additionally raised those counterclaims in connection with allegations that Historic Westside used, without authorization, a parking lot on his property at 19 Joseph E. Lowery which is not part of the easement. We therefore remand these claims, unrelated to the land comprising the easement, to the trial court for consideration.
10. Zywiciel contends, as part of his first enumeration, that the trial court erred in denying his counterclaim for unjust enrichment as it additionally applies to Historic Westside's alleged receipt of a $1.25 million grant related to property Zywiciel owns at 899-905 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. This contention does not present a claim upon which relief may be granted.
11. Zywiciel's first enumeration additionally asserts error as to the trial court's grant of partial summary judgment to Historic Westside and Atlanta Westside on his claims of nuisance and ejectment related to a utility pole that Georgia Power installed on his property in connection with the construction of Historic Westside's development, then later removed at his request. The trial court found that Historic Westside showed it did not instruct, recommend or consult with Georgia Power about the location of the utility pole. The trial court further found that Zywiciel and Muhammad presented insufficient contrary evidence to raise a triable issue, and upon review, we agree.
12. Finally, we turn to Zywiciel's assertion, also part of his first enumeration, that the trial court erred in deciding the cross-motions for summary judgment because the court allegedly viewed "several disputed material facts"
Judgment affirmed and case remanded with direction in Case No. A11A1243.
Judgment affirmed in Case No. A11A1582. SMITH, P.J., and DILLARD, J., concur.