Opinion
A99A1501.
DECIDED: JULY 26, 1999.
Easement. Tift Superior Court. Before Judge McCorvey.
Joseph I. Carter, for appellants.
Fred W. Rigdon, for Lindsey.
R.M. Hightower, pro se.
Patricia O'Quinn Harvey acquired an access easement across her sister's, Jo Edith Lindsey's, adjoining property via her deceased father's estate. Following this conveyance, Ms. Lindsey fenced her land and blocked Ms. Harvey's easement with chained gates. Ms. Lindsey allowed her neighbor, R. M. Hightower, to construct a "satellite dish" on her property, in the path of Ms. Harvey's easement.
Harvey brought an action against Lindsey and Hightower to remove these alleged obstructions. Lindsey answered and asserted a right to fence her property and gate Harvey's easement so as to protect her property. Hightower neither answered the complaint, nor made an appearance at a subsequent bench trial. The trial court later entered an order pertinently providing that Lindsey may gate Harvey's easement, but that she must provide Harvey with access keys. The trial court's order also provides that Hightower's satellite dish does not impair Harvey's easement. This appeal followed. Held:
Ms. Harvey's spouse is a party to this action as well as the appeal in the case sub judice.
Harvey contends the trial court erred in finding that Lindsey's gates do not obstruct her easement. She also contends the trial court erred in allowing Hightower's satellite dish to remain in her easement. We are compelled to agree.
In Hill v. Miller, 144 Ga. 404 ( 87 S.E. 385), the Georgia Supreme Court held that a servient tenant could not maintain a protective gate over the dominant tenant's prescriptive access easement. This holding is based on the fact that the dominant tenant acquired the easement during the prescriptive period without a gate obstruction. Thus, rather than examining the circumstances of the servient tenant's alleged need for protection, the Georgia Supreme Court excluded the servient's tenant's alleged right to gate his property by viewing such an obstruction as an unauthorized encumbrance upon the dominant tenant's easement. Id. at 407, supra. The same logic appears to apply in the case sub judice.
Although Harvey's access easement was conferred by grant rather than prescription, this difference does not appear to exclude the Georgia Supreme Court's reasoning in Hill. Because Harvey acquired her right of way over Lindsey's property without Lindsey's gates as an encumbrance, the trial court erred in ruling that Lindsey's gates do not impair Harvey's easement. And while the rule in Hill v. Miller, 144 Ga. 404, 407, supra, would likewise appear to require removal of Hightower's satellite dish, we need not address this issue since Hightower failed to answer Harvey's complaint, and thereby admitted that his satellite disk obstructs Harvey's easement. Moss v. Wilkie, 210 Ga. App. 688(2) ( 437 S.E.2d 367). See McCombs v. Southern Regional Medical Center, Inc., 233 Ga. App. 676, 677(2) ( 504 S.E.2d 747).
Judgment reversed. Andrews, P.J., and Ruffin, J., concur.