25 S.E.2d 315 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1943
Under the evidence the title to the bridge steel, to recover which the trover action was brought, was in the plaintiff, and the trial judge, hearing the case without the intervention of a jury, erred in rendering judgment for the defendant.
The judge in a written opinion held that, "When the Highway Department designated the highway in question as a State-aid road it became invested with all the rights that Stewart County then and there had in and to said road. By expressly providing for reimbursement to the respective counties for the expense of roads constructed in a certain way, the conclusion is inescapable that it was not the legislative intent that the Highway Department should incur any other obligation to the counties in designating State-aid roads," and that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain and recover the steel described in the trover action. The exception is to that judgment.
The situation with respect to the bridges here involved and the land on which they were located, at the time the State Highway Department took over the road as part of the State-aid road system in 1919 was as follows: Stewart County had operated and maintained the highway for several years but had never procured any deed to the land. In 1915 it had erected the bridges at its own *347
expense. Nothing else being shown, it had acquired as to the road, at most, only an easement. The fee remained in the person who owned the land at the time the county constructed the road. "Ownership of the soil and the right to an easement are independent. The grantee of an easement is not the owner or occupant of the estate over which the right extends, but the right to the fee and the right to an easement in the same realty are independent of each other, and may well coexist even when vested in different persons." Donalson v. Georgia Power Light Co.,
"Any thing intended to remain permanently in its place, though not actually attached to the land, such as a rail fence, is a part of the realty and passes with it. Machinery, not actually attached, but movable at pleasure, is not a part of the realty. Anything detached from the realty becomes personality instantly on being so detached." Code § 85-105. The general rule at common law was that articles attached to the realty became a part thereof, but there was an exception to this rule in the case oftrade fixtures. Charleston c. Ry. Co. v. Hughes,
It is clear that the removal of the bridges here involved would not impair the value of the land, and especially since they were constructed for the purpose of furthering traffic over Pataula Creek they were, under the above authorities, in the nature of trade fixtures, the title to which was in Stewart County. The State Highway Department, beginning in 1919 and to September 5, 1941, operated and maintained the road and bridges as part of the State-aid road system. It never acquired the fee to the land or to the bridges, though it appears to have obtained from one Mrs. Florence Crumbley, on October 8, 1935, a deed to certain land as a right of way, the property including 66 per cent. of the land on which the main bridge over Pataula Creek was erected though no part of the land on which the smaller bridge was placed. By such conveyance from Mrs. Crumbley no fee to the land or to the bridges was obtained. Only an easement was acquired. On November 5, 1941, the State Highway Department dismantled the two bridges, having on or about September 11, 1941, completed the erection of a new bridge over Pataula Creek on the right of way acquired by deed from Mrs. Crumbley. The steel from the bridges constructed by *349
Stewart County was removed, and at the time of the trover action here instituted was, as admitted in the defendant's answer, stored on a lot in the City of Lumpkin, Georgia, and in the possession of the defendant. When the bridges were dismantled the easement therein was abandoned by the State Highway Department. Abandonment is conclusively shown by the fact that the steel was moved elsewhere and stored. "An easement may be lost by abandonment, or forfeited by nonuser, if the abandonment or nonuser shall continue for a term sufficient to raise the presumption of release or abandonment." Code, § 85-1403; Calfee
v. Jones,
But it is contended by the defendant that the title to the bridges was not in Stewart County but in the State Highway Department, for the following reasons: The Code, § 95-1701, provides: "There is hereby created a system of State-aid roads for the purpose of interconnecting the several county seats, which shall be designated, constructed, improved, and maintained by the State through the State Highway Department, under the provisions of law; and the term `State-aid roads' shall include the State or interstate bridges and other subsidiary structures necessary or desirable in the construction of said roads." Code § 95-1708 provides: "Efforts shall be made to serve as large a territory and as many market points as practicable with the said system, due consideration being given topographic and construction difficulties. The State Highway Department shall have the right to resurvey and relocate in their entirety any or all of said roads, keeping in view only the control points. In relocating any road or right of way the State Highway Department shall confer with the ordinary or county commissioners, as the case may be, and give due consideration to their wishes, but in case of disagreement the judgment of the State Highway Board shall prevail." The Code, § 95-1709, provides: "When any portion of the designated State-aid road system is taken under the *350 jurisdiction of the State Highway Department, no county in which said portion is located shall thereafter he required to levy taxes for the construction or maintenance of said portion, nor to use any of its funds or road forces in the construction or maintenance thereof." Code § 95-1721 provides: "When a road is approved as a part of the system of State Highways, the establishment of such road and its construction, including location, surveys, grading, and paving, shall be under the control and supervision of the State Highway Board. All expenses necessary for such construction, including surveys, the location or relocation of such roads, and all other expenses connected with the establishment and construction thereof, except the expense of procuring rights of way, shall be paid by the Board out of funds allocated to the Highway Department. It shall be the duty of county commissioners or other county authorities having control of county roads to assist in procuring the necessary rights of way as cheaply as possible, and all expenses thereof, including the purchase price of any land purchased for a right of way, and all direct and consequential damages awarded in any proceeding brought to condemn any such right of way, shall be paid by the county in which such road is situated out of the county treasury: Provided, that nothing contained in this section shall prevent the State Highway Board from using State highway funds for the purpose of purchasing rights of way, or to pay the purchase price thereof, or to pay any damages awarded on account of the location of any such State-aid road, or from assisting the counties in so doing."
By the act of 1931 (Ga. L. 1931, pp. 97, 99) an amendment to the constitution was proposed whereby the State would assume certain indebtedness of the counties of the State incurred in the construction or paving of certain public roads or highways. This amendment as proposed was ratified by the people in 1932; and on March 1, 1933, was approved the enabling act passed pursuant thereto. Ga. L. 1933, pp. 161-172. The constitutional provision as amended appears in the Code, § 2-5601, in which it is provided in part, "that all indebtedness of the several counties of this State . . heretofore incurred for the construction and/or paving of the public roads or highways (including bridges) of the State, as contemplated and defined by article six, section 1, of the act approved August 18, 1919, as said section appears on page 252 of the Georgia *351 laws of 1919, which were a part of the State-aid roads of the highway system of Georgia, and said work was done under the supervision of the Highway Department, is hereby assumed by the State of Georgia as an indebtedness of the State." The amendment also provided for the issuance of certificates of indebtedness by the State Highway Department, and the enabling act of 1933, supra, which is codified in sections 95-2101 et seq., declared the various amounts due the respective counties, the amount due Stewart County being shown as $47,475, the sums declared to be due being for "assessments made against said counties . . for the construction and/or paving of the public roads and highways (including bridges) of the State, which were a part of the State-aid roads of the highway system of Georgia, which saidconstruction and/or paving was done or contract or agreement madefor same to be done, under the supervision of the State HighwayDepartment prior to September 1, 1931." (Italics ours.)
It is urged that by reason of these provisions the State Highway Department acquired title to the bridges constructed by Stewart County by assuming the expense of maintaining them and the highway which they served, the county being relieved of that duty and provision having been made by the amendment to the constitution (Code § 2-5601) and the enabling act (Code § 95-2101) for reimbursing the county for expense it had sustained in maintaining the bridges and the road they served. It is further contended by the defendant that if the county was not satisfied with the amount paid it as reimbursement of expense incurred with respect to any road which became a part of the State-aid system, a suit should have been brought against the Highway Department within ninety days from March 1, 1933, as provided by Code § 95-2109, and that the county is now barred from complaining, and title to the steel from the bridges is vested in the State Highway Department.
In the enabling act of 1933 (Ga. L. 1933, pp. 161-172), codified as Code §§ 95-2101 et seq., and in the amendment to the constitution the provision for reimbursing the various counties of the State was only as to "assessments made against said counties . . for the construction and/or paving of the public roads and highways (including bridges) of the State, which were a part of the State-aid roads of the highway system of Georgia,which said construction and/or paving was done, or contract oragreement made for same *352 to be done, under the supervision of the State Highway Department prior to September 1, 1931." (Italics ours.) The road on which were erected the bridges in question was being operated and maintained by Stewart County at the time the legislature enacted the act of 1919 providing for a State-aid road system. The bridges had been constructed in 1915 at the county's expense. None of the work was done at the instance of the State Highway Department or under its supervision. The work was not on a road which was a part of the "State-aid roads." Consequently, the provisions of the amendment to the constitution and the enabling act of 1933, supra, have no application here. The sum declared due the county, $47,475, in the enabling act was for expense incurred by Stewart County other than that sustained by it in maintaining the road over Pataula Creek as a county road before it became a part of the State-aid road system.
In State Highway Department v. Richmond County,
It follows from what is said above that the trial judge erred in rendering judgment for the defendant.
Judgment reversed. Stephens, P. J., and Felton, J., concur. *353