In this equity action, appellant Winston Menzies, d/b/a Cars for Christ (“CFC”), contends that the trial court abused its discretion in fashioning injunctive relief to alleviate excessive rаin and surface water run-off from property occupied by CFC onto property owned by appellee Amanda Hall. Because we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm.
The evidence presented authorized the trial court to find that Hall is the owner of a 2.5 acre tract of improved real property located in Rockdale County. She has resided on the property since 1943. In 2000, the Greater Grace Church of Conyers 2000 Trust, over which Menzies sеrves as trustee, entered into an agreement to lease property situated uphill and adjacent to Hall’s property. After the trust acquired its leasеhold interest, Menzies removed much of the grass located on the lot and replaced it with compacted gravel with the intent to operate CFC, a used car business, on the property and to store its used car inventory on the rear portion of the lot. These modifications to the property substantially increased the amount of water run-off on Hall’s property.
Hall complained to both Menzies and the City of Conyers, causing Menzies to retain an engineer who designed a plan for detention of the water run-off. The plan, as personally constructed by Menzies, provided for the installation of a concrete wall between the two lots with a four-inch pipe to direct water into a spreader swale along the property line to more evenly disburse the watеr as it flowed onto Hall’s property. Hall’s property continued to receive excessive water run-off, and she filed suit in November 2003 alleging a continuous nuisаnce and trespass. Both parties submitted engineering reports to the court and a hearing was held, after which the court issued a temporary injunction directing Menzies to stop any excessive water run-off onto Hall’s property but leaving it up to Menzies and his experts to determine what changes were necessary to achieve this result. 1
In its final order, the court found that installation of gravel on the CFC lot in combination with the storage of a large number of automobiles on the property resulted in an excessive amount of water run-off onto Hall’s property; that the effect was not temporary but substantiаl; that the excessive run-off created erosion of or damage to Hall’s property and prevented the use of the affected area for certain activities; and that despite Menzies’ efforts, the problem had yet to be cured. Finding the existence of a nuisance, the court directed Menzies tо complete his newly proposed engineering plan, to maintain the area as designed, and to refrain from storing or parking unattended motor vehiclеs on the rear portion of its lot.
1. Menzies contends on appeal that the remedy fashioned by the trial court to abate the flow of water onto Hall’s property constituted an abuse of discretion because it imposed a greater restriction than necessary to protect Hall. In surface wаter run-off disputes where two lots adjoin, “ ‘the lower lot owes a servitude to the higher, so far as to receive the water which naturally runs from it, provided the ownеr of the latter has done no act to increase such flow by artificial means.’ [Cits.]”
Cox v. Martin,
2. The decision whether to grant an injunction rests in the sound discretion of the judge, according to the circumstances of each case. OCGA § 9-5-8. See
Goode,
supra,
Here, the trial court did not clearly err when it determined that an adequate cure fоr the run-off problem required both
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The trial court modeled the language of this injunction after the general rule that “ ‘one land proprietor has no right to сoncentrate and collect [water], and thus cause it to be discharged upon the land of a lower proprietor in greater quantities at a pаrticular locality, or in a manner different from that in which the water would be received by the lower estate if it simply ran down upon it from the upper by the law of gravitation. [Cits.]’ [Cit.]”
Gill v. First Christian Church,
