In this inverse condemnation case, the jury found in favor of the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) on Fountain’s claim that MARTA had interfered with his right of ingress and egress by changing the traffic pattern of East Lake Drive past his service station. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the trial court should have directed a verdict for Fountain as to MARTA’s liability for the condemnation and should have confined the jury issue to a consideration of money damages.
Fountain v. MARTA,
The controlling facts are not in dispute. Fountain owns a service station at the corner of East Lake Drive and West Howard Avenue in DeKalb County. As a result of MARTA construction, East Lake Drive was rerouted and passes underneath West Howard with an exit ramp *733 up to West Howard. The old East Lake Drive is now a dead-end road terminating about 150 feet beyond Fountain’s property. None of his former access to either West Howard or East Lake Road has been changed or interfered with, but the traffic flow past his station has clearly been changed.
In
Tift County v. Smith,
Our court concluded in Tift County, supra, that the controlling factor was that Smith’s access to the public road upon which his property abutted was not interfered with, and hence the fact that farther down the road a dead-end obstruction was created, causing inconvenience, did not constitute the taking or damaging of private property for a public purpose so as to require compensation.
The more recent case of
DOT v. Whitehead,
In addition, Whitehead’s access to that intersection via 19th Street, on which he also bordered, was interfered with because DOT closed 19th Street so that traffic could not go from 19th Street to the intersection of Peachtree and West Peachtree. His access to 19th Street, itself, was not, however, impaired. We pointed out in Whitehead that this obstruction to 19th Street, this alteration of the traffic flow and the resulting inconvenience, was non-compensable since this action of the DOT did not amount to a taking of his private property *734 rights but instead damaged him in a general sense, common to that suffered by other members of the traveling public. 2
Viewing Fountain’s situation in the light of Tift and Whitehead, it is our opinion that the injury he complains of falls squarely within the non-compensable category and MARTA was not liable to Fountain for special damages as a matter of law. 3
The issue of condemnation or not is ordinarily a question of law for the courts, and MARTA should have prevailed as a matter of law.
Piedmont Cotton Mills v. Ga. R. &c. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Whitehead did not seek damages for the closing of 19th Street, nor for the changing of Spring and West Peachtree Streets to one-way streets. He was, however, permitted to show evidence of this and the resulting overall inconvenience in connection with his claim concerning the taking of his access directly onto Peachtree and West Peachtree.
Warren v. State Highway Comm.,
We analogize Fountain’s problem to that in Whitehead of the non-compensable blocking of 19th Street rather than to the compensable taking of Whitehead’s direct access to Peachtree Street and West Peachtree Street.
