Rossee Oil Company, Inc. (“Rossee”) brought an action against BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc. (“BellSouth”), alleging that Bell-South entered its property without authority and buried telephone cable; that BellSouth’s wilful and wanton trespass warrants exemplary damages and that BellSouth’s bad faith authorizes attorney fees and expenses of litigation. BellSouth moved for summary judgment on Rossee’s claims for punitive damages, attorney fees and expenses of litigation, arguing that Rossee is entitled to only such damages as would be authorized in a condemnation proceeding; that punitive damages and expenses of litigation are not authorized where a public service company encroaches upon land for the good of the public and that “no independent ground for punitive damages exists [because Rossee failed to] prove by clear and convincing evidence that [Bell-South’s] actions showed willful misconduct, malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, or that entire want of care which would raise the presumption of conscious indifference to consequences.”
In support of BellSouth’s motion for summary judgment, Mitchell J. Anderson deposed that he is the BellSouth engineer responsible for placement of telephone cable on Rossee’s property and that he was “under the belief that the DOT right-of-way encompassed the property upon which [BellSouth’s] cable was to be located ...” because “the DOT representative informed me that there would be no conflicts at that location and that it would be fine for us to relocate there.” In opposition, M. S. Rainey deposed that he is the president of Rossee; that BellSouth did not have permission to bury cable on Rossee’s property; that he had no knowledge of BellSouth’s activities on Rossee’s property until at least eight days (April 19, 1991) after burial of the cable was complete; that Mitchell J. Anderson then assured him that the cable would be removed from Rossee’s property *236 and that BellSouth failed to honor this assurance. 1
The trial court granted BellSouth’s motion for summary judgment with regard to punitive damages, attorney fees and expenses of litigation. This appeal followed. Held:
In
Oglethorpe Power Corp. v. Sheriff,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Based on an interrogatory response that a representative of Rossee visited the subject property “2-3 times each week [for a] general inspection” during the month BellSouth buried cable on Rossee’s property (sometime between April 1 and 11, 1991), BellSouth states that M. S. Rainey knew that it was installing cable on Rossee’s property at the time the cable was being planted. This conclusion is not supported by the above admission and is contradicted in the affidavit of M. S, Rainey.
