185 Ga. 601 | Ga. | 1938
1. The alteration of a public road involves the discontinuance of that part of the road which is altered. Ponder v. Shannon, 54 Ga. 188. Therefore the allegations of the petition that the county authorities “proceeded to alter said public road by changing its course in several places, including a change in front of plaintiff’s land,” without publishing any notice, as against general demurrer, sufficiently alleged a failure of the county authorities to comply with requirements of publication of notice both as to the locating of the new portion of the altered road and the discontinuance of the old. Code, § 95-201 et seq.
2. The county authorities can not lawfully discontinue a public road, either in whole or in part, except in the manner provided by law, after application, and notice and registration in the proper office. Code, § 95-207; Jones v. Williams, 70 Ga. 704 (2); Hamilton v. Cooper, 149 Ga. 669, 671 (101 S. E. 909); Shellnut v. Carroll County, 30 Ga. App. 200 (117 S. E. 333); Wellmaker v. Lamar County Advisory Board, 43 Ga. App. 816 (160 S. E. 708). The abandonment of a public highway by mere nonuser does not work a forfeiture of the right to its use. Jones v. Williams, supra. Compare Kelsoe v. Oglethorpe, 120 Ga. 951 (48 S. E. 366, 102 Am. St. R. 138).
3. The provisions of the Code, § 95-201 et seq., in so far as they pertain to the establishment of new roads or new parts of an altered road, are merely cumulative, and not exclusive. Penick v. County of Morgan, 131 Ga. 385 (62 S. E. 300); Lee County v. Smithville, 154 Ga. 550 (115 S. E. 107); Shore v. Banks County, 162 Ga. 185 (142 S. E. 753). Section 95-204 of the Code of 1933 (Code of 1910, § 643), which declares that “Any proceeding to
4. Whether or not the plaintiff, by failing to object to the alteration of the road, may be now estopped from compelling the county authorities by mandamus to work and maintain the old part of the altered road, yet where, as in the instant case, the county authorities, upon the building of the new portion of the altered road, erected a bridge crossing the ditch on the south side, of the new portion, which was the ditch on the north side of the old portion, for the plaintiff’s use as a means of egress and ingress to and from the new portion, the plaintiff is not estopped, as against a landowner on whose land the new portion lies, and who is illegally and without authority obstructing and plowing up such way across the old portion to the new portion, from setting up that the old portion of the altered road has not been discontinued as provided by law, and that it is still a public road.
5. Owners of land abutting on a public highway have two separate and distinct kinds of rights in a highway. One is a public right to use and enjoy the highway in common with all other members of the public; the other rights arise from their ownership of property contiguous to the highway which does not belong to the public generally; and these rights exist regardless of whether the
6. In the instant case the old portion of the altered road, abutting on the plaintiff’s land, and the new road being contiguous at the point where the plaintiff maintained a way of egress and ingress to and from the old road, and they both being a public highway, they are for the purposes of this case a single highway, and the plaintiff as an abutting landowner has a right of egress and ingress to and from such highway and to the most traveled portion thereof, which in this case appears to be the new portion of the altered road.
7. One whose means of egress from and ingress to his property abutting on a public highway is illegally and unnecessarily interfered with by the placing of obstructions in and the plowing up of the portion of such way lying in the highway by another, not the public authority charged with the duty of maintaining and keeping in repair such highway, suffers a special injury and may maintain an action for damages therefor against the wrong-doer, his injury being different from that suffered by the public at large, although such obstruction and interference may also constitute a public nuisance. Brunswick & Western R. Co. v. Hardey, 112 Ga. 604 (3) (37 S. E. 888, 52 L. R. A. 396); 13 R. C. L. 231, § 195. See Code, §§ 72-103, 105-1401, 105-1410. According to the particular ease, the damages may be the depreciation in market value, if the obstruction is a permanent one (Atkinson v. Kreis, 140 Ga. 52 (2), 78 S. E. 465); and the damage may be that to business and loss of profits. Brunswick & Western R. Co. v. Hardey, supra. See notes in 25 Am. R. 534; 18 L. R. A. 154; 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 821; 12 Ann. Cas. 25. Punitive damages may be recovered where
8. Such a landowner may also, under such circumstances, maintain a suit in equity to enjoin further interference with his means of egress to and ingress from the public highwajq when such interference amounts to a continuing nuisance or trespass, and where an injunction would prevent a multiplicity of suits. Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Cohen, 50 Ga. 451; Russell v. Napier, 80 Ga. 77 (3) (4 S. E. 857); Coker v. Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railway Co., 123 Ga. 483 (3) (51 S. E. 481); Holman v. Athens Empire Laundry Co., 149 Ga. 345 (100 S. E. 207, 6 A. L. R. 1564); Rentz v. Roach, 145 Ga. 491 (115 S. E. 94); Ashford v. Walters, 160 Ga. 350 (127 S. E. 758); Harris v. Powell, 177 Ga. 15 (169 S. E. 355).
9. It follows that the petition in the instant case set forth a cause of action both for damages and injunction. The court did not err in overruling the general demurrer. The special grounds of the demurrer are without merit.
Judgment affirmed.