Fulton County appeals the order of the trial court, filed in January 1993, granting the motion of J. W. Threatt, Jr., and other appellees to set aside a judgment entered on August 10, 1976, awarding condemnees $5,285.23 and condemning certain land for purposes of a permanent sewer easement and temporary construction easement.
Fulton County commenced this condemnation action by filing a complaint in rem in July 1976. Condemnees Threatt and Ace Sand Company filed an answer; a special master was appointed who ultimately entered an award in favor, inter alia, of condemnees in the amount of $5,285.23; the superior court entered an order confirming this award and vesting title to the easements in Fulton County in August 1976. The record reflects that condemnees filed no exceptions to the award. See generally
Leach v. Ga. Power Co.,
Pretermitting whether the original condemnation judgment contained either an amendable or non-amendable defect (compare Leach, supra at 20), or was, for any legal cause, void on its face, voidable, or valid, is the issue whether condemnees are estopped nevertheless from attacking the 16-year-old judgment by reason of their conduct. We find condemnees are estopped.
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1. Regarding the issue of estoppel, the controlling precedent is
Wrege v. Cobb County,
Additionally, by withdrawing the money without timely protesting the
validity
of the award, appellant was acquiescing sub silentio as to the
enforceability
of the award, and perforce, the adequacy of the description therein contained. Moreover, appellant’s act of voluntarily dismissing his appeal is further conduct evincing such acquiescence. To allow appellant to prevail under these circumstances would be contrary to the well-established appellate rule that a party cannot suffer what he deems to be an injustice during the course of a trial, hoping for an acceptable result, and then after the trial first state his objection to the procedure followed. See
Bruce v. State,
2. Condemnees long ago withdrew their appeal with prejudice; a new appeal cannot now be commenced. However, condemnees assert that, because the judgment is void on its face, it can be attacked at any time. Although OCGA § 22-2-113 (a) provides thát the tender, payment, or acceptance of the amount of the award shall not prevent any party from prosecuting an appeal, this provision is not applicable in this case. First, appellee withdrew his original appeal with prejudice, and therefore this statutory provision has no application to the situation before us. Secondly, assuming this case can be classified as an appeal within the meaning of this Code section, this statutory
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“language is not applicable to appeals in which the condemnee challenges the right to condemn, [the validity of the condemnation proceeding or order, or otherwise directly or indirectly protests the condemnation itself,] as opposed [merely to challenging] the amount of the award.”
Wrege,
supra at 242. Third, condemnees consistently have claimed that the condemnation judgment is void on its face due to apparent inconsistencies as to the description of the property or property interests being condemned. These inconsistencies should have been readily apparent to condemnees when the judgment was entered in 1976 and, certainly apparent by the time they timely filed their notice of appeal. In
Marshall v. Marshall,
Judgment reversed.
