Appellees filed a nuisance action in August 2003 seeking to enjoin appellants’ use of a portion of their property as a motocross track. The trial court chose to impanel a jury as an aid in finding facts, see
Guhl v. Davis,
1. This Court held in
Guhl,
supra,
[although there is no right to jury trial, the court may call for special verdicts if, in its discretion, it desires to seek a jury’s aid as a fact finding body to resolve specific factual disputes. The court then will have the facts as determined by the jury’s special verdict in deciding the ultimate . . . issue.
Accord
Turner Advertising Co. v. Garcia,
In
Bagley,
supra, although the trial court originally adopted the jury’s factual findings and entered judgment in accordance with those findings, we upheld the subsequently granted judgment n.o.v., which the trial court entered after observing the advisory nature of the jury’s verdict and the lack of evidence to support the jury’s finding. In
Montana v. Blount,
In contrast with these cases, the trial court here acknowledged the jury’s special verdict without any reservation or expression of dissatisfaction and made no contrary factual findings. But notwithstanding the jury’s finding that appellants’ operation of motorcycles on their property for the two years prior to the trial did not constitute a nuisance, the trial court rendered a ruling completely at odds with this finding when it imposed a permanent injunction severely restricting appellants’ use of the motocross track. While the trial court was not bound by the jury’s special verdict, we hold that it could not acknowledge a verdict it “previously but unnecessarily had submitted” to the jury, Connell, supra at 719 (1), thereby implicitly accepting the jury’s findings, and then ignore that verdict without setting forth factual findings of its own to support its ruling. Accordingly, because the facts accepted by the trial court do not support the imposition of the permanent injunction in this case, we reverse.
2. The trial court erred by providing in its order that the injunc-tive relief it granted would “run with the land.”
Injunction is distinctly an equitable remedy, and a court of equity acts in personam, not in rem. [Cit.] It is relief which may be enforced by the court granting it by attachment against the party refusing to obey the mandates of the decree.
Howard v. Warren, 206
Ga. 838, 839 (2) (
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The jury was authorized to find that the motocross track was used extensively prior to June 2003 when it was open to the public but thereafter was used only infrequently by Justin Knott once appellants, at least partially in response to complaints by appellees, chose to close it to the public.
Motorcycles were permitted Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday for two two-hour periods (10 a.m.-noon and 2-4 p.m.) and permitted on Saturday for one two-hour period (10 a.m.-noon).
Only three motorcycles were allowed to run at the same time; further, only one four-stroke motorcycle could run at any time except for the Monday morning session, at which time two such motorcycles were permitted.
