This is an appeal from the grant of an interlocutory injunction in Cobb Superior Court arising from a dispute over whether the appellees have a vested right to use a strip of land, approximately 20 feet in width and 372 feet in length, which is shown on a subdivision plat to run northerly along the rear of lots 1,2 and 3 from South Cobb Drive in Cobb County to the southwest corner of lot 4 owned by the appellees. The trial court overruled a motion to dismiss the complaint. However, after an evidentiary hearing, the trial court temporarily enjoined the appellants from obstructing the strip and from interfering with the appellees’ use of the strip for ingress and egress to the rear of their lot.
While a word picture of the disputed strip of land and the lots owned by the parties might be adequate to reveal the resulting legal issues, any factual account of the case is best served by reproducing a copy of the plat of the subdivision and this will be done since it is included in the transcript of the evidence.
Appellants insist it is clear from the plat itself that the original owner and subdivider intended to reserve the strip to himself and appellees insist it is equally clear that the subdivider intended to reserve the strip as an alley for the use of the owners of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 to have access to the rear of their lots. The plat itself shows that all of the lots in the subdivision have access to and front upon Ridge Road, the main public street providing access to South Cobb Drive.
The evidence shows that the original owner and subdivider, J. E. Alverson, built a dwelling on lot 3 in 1961 and lived there until he sold the house and lot in 1964 to the immediate predecessor in title to the present owner of lots 2 and 3, appellant Miller. Lot 4 was originally sold by the subdivider, appellant Alverson, to Joe C. Dalton in 1964 but no house was constructed on the property by him. The appellees purchased lot 4 from Mr. Dalton in 1971, built a home on the property and claim a right to use the reserved strip for access to South Cobb Drive from the rear of their lot by virtue of their reliance on the general scheme of the subdivision and the words of dedication on the plat. None of the various deeds to lots in the subdivision make specific mention of the reserved strip but are simply conveyances reciting metes and bounds descriptions and giving lot numbers by reference to the recorded plat of the subdivision.
The owners of lots 1,2 and 3 enjoyed permissive use of the disputed strip from the original owner and subdivider
Appellant Alverson, the original owner and subdivider, testified that he built the first home in the subdivision and that he reserved the disputed strip so that he could drive from his carport out the back side of lot 3 to South Cobb Drive. He also testified that at the time he laid out the subdivision in 1961 there was a hedge (about four feet high) which divides lot 3 from lot 4 and separates the north end of the disputed strip from lot 4. Alverson also testified the disputed strip was never used by the public, but that it was graveled and that it curved into his carport driveway on lot 3 rather than extending to the south line of lot 4, as shown on the plat.
Appellant Miller, the present owner of lots 2 and 3, also testified the disputed strip did not run to the south boundary of lot 4 but curved to the carport driveway on lot 3. She testified that neither she nor her former husband (who owned the lot as her predecessor in title) placed any obstruction on the disputed strip, blocking access to it from lot 4 owned by the appellees, and that the only existing obstruction is the same hedgerow that was there in 1964.
Appellee Wells also testified that the disputed strip was blocked off at the corner of his lot (No. 4) by the hedge and he could not get from his lot onto the strip. He testified that, to his knowledge, the hedge was planted by appellant Miller’s former husband, her immediate predecessor in title. Mr. Wells also testified that, from the plat itself and from his conversation with Mr. Joe Dalton before he bought lot 4 from him, he thought he would have full use of the disputed strip and would not have purchased his lot if he had known otherwise. Appellee Wells also testified that he had observed the owners of the other lots using the disputed strip but no one else. He also
We think the trial court correctly overruled the appellants’ motion to dismiss the complaint. It stated a claim for relief and the legal issues presented by it cannot be determined solely as a matter of law. The designation of the disputed strip as "reserved” on the subdivision plat is insufficient by itself under the circumstances of this case to conclude that the owner-subdivider of the land intended to reserve the use of the strip only for himself. The strip could serve as an alley providing access from the rear of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the subdivision to South Cobb Drive.
Of course, the addition of a few words, such as, "to grantor” after the word "reserved” on the original plat would have made it clear that no dedication of the presently disputed area was ever intended by the subdivider. However, the designation of this strip solely as "reserved” on the plat creates an ambiguity in view of the dimensions and location of the strip in relation to the lots in the subdivision.
In reaching this conclusion, we are not unmindful of good secondary authorities relied upon by appellants in their brief. Pindar’s Georgia Real Estate Law, § 8-15, at p. 310, states that "merely leaving a strip of land between two [subdivision] lots does not create a street or alley, and the result is the same where the strip is marked 'reserved.’ ” Pindar relies on 26 CJS 445, § 23, where a holding in Cleveland v. Bergen Bldg. &c. Co., 55 A 117 (4) (N. J.) is noted. A part of the syllabus in that case is that: "Conveyances by the owners of lots, referring to two maps in one of which a street is laid out, and in the other of which a strip therein is marked 'reserved,’ do not amount to a dedication of the strip to public use.”
No Georgia case has been cited or found which is dispositive of the present issue as a matter of law. Therefore, in view of the ambiguity created by the plat, we believe the trial court correctly overruled the motion to dismiss and conducted an evidentiary hearing on the questions presented by the complaint.
We cannot read "reserved” to mean "access” or imply as a matter of law that this strip was intended as an alley by the original owner and subdivider. Black’s Law Dictionary (Rev. 4th Ed.) (1968), defines the word "reserve” as meaning "to keep back, to retain, to keep in store for future or special use, and to retain or hold over to a future time . . .,” citing a federal tax case. "Reserved land” is defined, from a California case, as public land that has been withheld or kept back from sale or disposition. While these definitions are not controlling, it is obvious that all of them indicate that the word "reserved” indicates something that is withheld and not something that is granted. This language from the law conveys the same meaning as language used in recognized dictionaries, such as Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1971) where "reserve” is defined as meaning, inter alia, to keep back, retain, to make legal reservation of, withhold from the operation of a grant, agreement, or release.
In summary, the law does not demand a conclusion that the "reserved” strip of land shown on this plat was reserved solely for the subdivider or was reserved for the benefit of the lot owners whose lots adjoin the strip of land. Nor can we say the evidence demanded a decision for either side.
Ordinarily, the discretion of the trial court in
Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part.
