SECOND DIVISION
BARNES, P. J.,
BOGGS and RICKMAN, JJ.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
September 7, 2016
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A16A0885. R. C. ACRES, INC. v. MOMMIES PROPERTIES,
LLC. et al.
BARNES, Presiding Judge.
This is the second appearance of this case involving a dispute as to the location
of Appellant R. C. Acres, Inc.’s easement of ingress and egress over real property
owned by Appellees Mommies Properties, LLC and Vinay Bose (collectively, the “M.
P. defendants”).1 At issue in the present appeal is whether the trial court amended the
judgment to specify the ultimate location of the easement in a manner that conformed
to the jury’s verdict and the evidence presented at trial, as this Court in the prior
appeal instructed the trial court to do on remand. See R.C. Acres, Inc. v. Cambridge
Faire Properties, LLC, 331 Ga. App. 762, 769-770 (3) (771 SE2d 444) (2015) (“R.
C. Acres I”). Because the trial court amended the judgment on remand in a manner
1
Appellee F. H. Partners, LLC is a lender with a security interest in the property
owned by Mommies Properties that intervened in the lawsuit following the remand
after the first appeal.
that did not conform to the reasonable intendment of the jury’s verdict and the trial
evidence, we must reverse the amended judgment and remand for further action
consistent with this opinion.
We summarized the relevant trial evidence in R. C. Acres I:
At trial, R. C. presented testimony that it owns a parcel of
property on the Chattahoochee River in Forsyth County. The parcel is
landlocked, and was originally part of a larger tract of land with access
to a nearby highway, owned by the Rives Corporation (“Rives”) at the
time R. C. acquired its parcel from Rives, but later divided into two
tracts and conveyed to others. One tract was [ultimately] transferred to
[Cambridge Faire Properties LLC, and White Repair & Contracting Co.
(collectively, the “Cambridge defendants”)]; the other was developed as
an equestrian property by an intermediate owner, Silver Creek
Development, and eventually transferred to M.P. defendants Mommies
Properties and Bose.
At the time of the sale to R. C. in 1985, Rives granted “a sixty
foot wide easement which runs parallel to the south boundary line” of
the property. The deed did not describe the easement location in more
detail; instead, it explicitly provided: “a relocated easement of ingress
and egress will be obtained between the parties hereto, their respective
heirs and assigns subsequent to the date of this conveyance.” A Rives
officer testified that this agreement was made so that the parties
involved could later agree upon a mutually convenient location.
2
A major issue at trial was whether the easement was relocated by
agreement between the parties or their predecessors in title. While the
M.P. defendants contend the evidence showed that the easement was
never relocated with respect to their property, citing portions of the
record, R. C. points to evidence in the record, including surveys, deeds,
and testimony, showing that the easement was relocated by agreement
to an existing roadway on the property, known as “Woods Road” or
“Old Woods Road.” Testimony was presented that this route was used
from R. C.’s acquisition of the property in 1985 until 2005, by R. C. and
others, including a lessee of R. C. which operated a model airplane club
on the land, and the Army Corps of Engineers, which used the roadway
to access a dam release warning horn on the river. R. C. presented
surveys referenced in the various deeds which identified this roadway
as its easement. Some evidence was also presented to show that after the
equestrian complex was developed in 1998 by Silver Creek, a
predecessor in title to the M. P. defendants, a barn blocked a portion of
this existing roadway, and a gravel drive was installed around it.
The location of the easement became an issue after Mommies
Properties purchased the stable property in 2005 and blocked access to
R. C.’s property, informing R. C. by e-mail that it could no longer use
the roadway. R. C. presented evidence that after matters reached this
impasse, it began negotiations with both the M.P. defendants and the
Cambridge defendants to move the easement to a location agreeable to
all the parties. Testimony was presented that a location was agreed upon,
and that R. C. constructed a roadway at its expense, referred to by the
3
parties as the “New Road.” This roadway, however, was also blocked by
defendants, and this action followed.
(Footnote omitted.) R. C. Acres I, 331 Ga. App. at 764-765 (1).
R. C. filed a complaint seeking to quiet title to its easement and for damages
for interference with its use and enjoyment of the easement, and the case ultimately
proceeded to trial against multiple defendants, including the Cambridge defendants
and the M. P. defendants. The jury trial that ensued was bifurcated. The first phase
of the trial addressed the original and final locations of the easement over the
defendants’ properties, and the second phase addressed whether and to what extent
the defendants interfered with R.C.’s easement rights.
As part of the preparation of the special verdict form for the first phase of the
trial, the trial court decided that the jury would be provided a redacted plat of the
defendants’ properties and would be asked to draw the original and final locations of
the easement on the plat using colored markers. When the trial court provided the
parties with its proposed redacted plat, R. C. objected to the plat and to the procedure
proposed by the trial court for identifying the original and final locations of the
easement. R. C. took issue with the fact that the redacted plat prepared by the trial
court showed the outline of “Old Woods Road” and the southern boundary line of the
4
defendants’ properties, but not the outline of the “New Road,” which was another
possible location of the easement that could be found by the jury. R. C. argued that
[s]hould the jury select some place other than what might clearly be Old
Woods Road or might clearly be the southern boundary of the property
when they locate the easement on the property, we are all going to be
left to guess. They obviously won’t be able to make a survey with a
colored marker, and we will be left to guess where on the ground that
the jury indicated to locate the easement.
R. C. proposed that the jury instead be given a clear choice between a limited number
of alternative locations for the easement based on the evidence and argument
presented by the parties at trial.
The M. P. defendants responded that the redacted plat and the procedure
proposed by the trial court would result in the identification of the original and final
locations of the easement with sufficient certainty because “[t]he Court has authority
to interpret the verdict in connection with future proceedings.” The M.P. defendants
noted that “if, for example, the jury were to . . . come up with a path that follows even
roughly where the location of [the] new road is,” the court could refer to other
surveys in the record to identify the easement intended by the jury.
5
The trial court overruled R.C.’s objections to the redacted plat and to the
procedure for having the jury identify the original and final locations of the easement.
The trial court concluded that “wherever . . . [the jurors] mark the location of the
easement, the Court will be able to interpret that location” to scale.
In its subsequent charge to the jury in the first phase of the trial, the trial court
discussed the special verdict form with the jurors. The trial court instructed the jurors
to answer the questions on the form about the location of the original deeded
easement, whether the easement had been relocated, and, if so, when the relocation
had occurred. In discussing the redacted plat attached as an exhibit to the special
verdict form, the trial court instructed the jurors to draw the original deeded easement
and the relocated easement on the plat, which had a graphics scale attached to it
showing how many feet equaled one inch, and the court provided the jury a survey
scale, a calculator, colored markers, and extra copies of the redacted plat. The trial
court clarified that “[i]n deciding the issue of whether the deeded easement was
relocated, and if so, to what location, [the jurors were] not to consider the issue of the
width of any such relocated easement,” which was an issue for the court to determine.
The trial court also later clarified, in response to a question from jurors, that the
6
reference to the “relocated” easement in the special verdict form meant the final
location of the easement.
Following its deliberations, the jury returned a special verdict form finding that
the original location of the easement was “parallel to the southern boundary” of the
property, that the easement had been relocated, and that the relocation had occurred
in “Fall 2008.” On the redacted plat attached to the special verdict form, the jury drew
two lines with the colored markers, labeling one “Deeded Easement” and the other
“New-Relocated Road.”
The jury’s special verdict form and redacted plat were incorporated into the
trial court’s judgment after the second phase of the bifurcated trial.2 The judgment did
not reduce to scale or include a metes and bounds description of the original and final
locations of the easement. Although the trial court had previously determined as a
matter of law that the width of the easement was 60 feet, that determination also was
not incorporated into the judgment.
2
In the second phase of the bifurcated trial, the jury awarded damages to R. C.
against the Cambridge defendants for interference with its easement, but found in
favor of the M. P. defendants on R. C.’s interference claim. The second phase of the
bifurcated trial is not at issue in the present appeal.
7
R.C. appealed from the judgment entered by the trial court, contending, among
other things, that the judgment did not adequately identify or describe the final
location of the easement, thereby preventing R.C. from obtaining marketable title.3
See R. C. Acres I, 331 Ga. App. at 769 (3). In R. C. Acres I, we agreed with R. C. that
the description of the easement in the judgment was not sufficiently certain. 331 Ga.
App. at 769-770 (3). Accordingly, we vacated the portion of the judgment regarding
the final location of the easement, and we remanded with the direction “that the trial
court amend the judgment to conform to the jury’s verdict and the evidence, to make
the description of the easement sufficiently certain.” Id. at 770 (3).4
On remand, R. C. filed a motion requesting that the trial court appoint a land
surveyor to prepare a survey and legal description of the final location of the
easement on the M. P. defendants’ property that would be plotted along the route of
3
R. C. had filed a motion to amend the judgment, but the trial court did not have
the opportunity to rule on the motion before R. C. filed its notice of appeal.
4
In R. C. Acres I, we also held that the trial court erred by limiting the jury’s
consideration of the easement to its original and final locations and by improperly
restricting R. C.’s cross-examination of a defense witness. 331 Ga. App. at 763-769
(1), (2). We reversed and remanded for a retrial of the second phase of the bifurcated
trial, id. at 767 (1), but the second phase was never retried because the parties reached
a settlement on the claims related to that phase of the proceedings.
8
the “New-Relocated Road” as built in Fall 2008.5 R. C. subsequently retained a
surveyor, who identified the actual gravel road that had been built near the southern
boundary line of the M. P. defendant’s property and then prepared a survey of the
easement based on the route of that road.
The trial court, however, did not incorporate R. C.’s commissioned survey that
was based on the location of the existing gravel road into the amended judgment.
Instead, the trial court directed the surveyor to reduce to scale and provide a legal
description of the final location of the easement on the M. P. defendant’s property by
precisely following the line as drawn with a marker by the jury on the redacted plat.
Specifically, over R.C.’s objection, the trial court directed the surveyor to mark the
jury’s hand-drawn line as the centerline of the easement, plot the centerline with a
metes and bounds description, and then identify and plot 30 feet on either side of the
centerline with a metes and bounds description. The trial court acknowledged that the
evidence showed that “an actual gravel road” existed on M. P.’s property that might
fall within the boundaries of the easement as plotted by the surveyor based on the
jury’s hand-drawn line, and the court directed that the surveyor also depict the “as-
5
R. C. reached a settlement with the Cambridge defendants regarding the final
location of the easement over their property.
9
built gravel road” on the survey so that it could be compared to the location of the
plotted easement.
As directed by the trial court, the surveyor completed the survey reflecting the
final location of the 60-foot easement based strictly on the hand-drawn line made by
the jury on the redacted plat. The surveyor also depicted the location of the existing
gravel road near the southern boundary of M.P.’s property for comparison purposes.
Most of the gravel road fell within the 60-foot easement that the surveyor plotted
based on the line drawn by the jury. On one small portion of the survey, however, the
gravel road fell outside the boundaries of the easement as drawn by the surveyor.
During a hearing conducted to address the survey that had been prepared at the
direction of the trial court, R. C. again argued that the plotting of the final location
of the easement by the surveyor should be based on the actual location of the gravel
road rather than on the jury’s hand-drawn line on the redacted plat. According to R.
C., the jury’s findings in the special verdict form and labeling of the easements on the
redacted plat clearly showed that the jury intended for the existing gravel road near
the southern boundary line, i.e., the “New-Relocated Road” built in Fall 2008, to be
the final location of the easement, and the jury’s freehand drawing of the line on the
10
plat with the colored marker was simply the jury’s best effort to approximate the
location of that road.
The trial court disagreed with R. C. and entered an amended judgment
incorporating the survey and legal description of the final location of the easement
that was based strictly on the hand-drawn line made by the jury on the redacted plat.
Consequently, a portion of the existing gravel road fell outside the boundaries of the
easement under the amendment judgment entered by the trial court. R. C. now appeals
from the amended judgment.
In this appeal, R. C. contends that the trial court erred on remand by failing to
conform the amended judgment to the reasonable intendment of the verdict and the
evidence presented at trial. According to R. C., the jury clearly intended for the final
location of the easement to be the “New-Relocated Road” as built on the M.P.
defendant’s property in Fall 2008, which was the existing gravel road shown on the
plat drawn by the surveyor as directed by the trial court. Given the jury’s intent in
reaching its verdict and the evidence presented at trial, R.C. argues that the trial court
erred by entering an amended judgment that incorporated a survey based strictly on
the line drawn by the jury on the redacted plat, which caused a portion of the gravel
road to fall outside the boundaries of the plotted easement. We agree.
11
Judgment and execution shall conform to the verdict,
and a judgment may be amended by order of the court to
conform to the verdict upon which it is predicated, even
after an execution issues. The judgment must conform to
the reasonable intendment of the verdict upon which it is
based, as determined by an inspection of the record,
including the verdict and pleadings. Consequently, the trial
court was required to examine the record and determine if
the jury’s intent plainly appeared upon the face of the
record.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) R. C. Acres I, 331 Ga. App. at 769 (3). See OCGA
§§ 9-12-4; 9-12-9; Turley v. Turley, 244 Ga. 808, 809 (262 SE2d 112) (1979);
Kaufman Dev. Partners v. Eichenblatt, 324 Ga. App. 71, 75-76 (3) (749 SE2d 374)
(2013). Mindful of these principles, we turn to the record in this case.
During the first phase of the bifurcated jury trial, Benjamin Friedman, R. C.’s
representative, testified that in 2008, he reached an agreement with the M. P.
defendants to build a new road near the southern boundary of their property that
would provide a new means of access to R. C.’s property. Mr. Bose, the manager of
Mommies Properties, likewise testified that the M. P. defendants had reached an
agreement with Mr. Friedman regarding the location and construction of the new
road, and the owner of the stables operated on the M. P. defendant’s property
12
similarly confirmed that Mr. Bose had reached an agreement regarding the new road
with Mr. Friedman.
According to Mr. Friedman, once the parties reached an agreement regarding
the new road, he had a 20-foot-wide road that cost $60,000 constructed near the
southern boundary of the M. P. defendant’s property over a three-week period in Fall
2008, and he identified the dirt-and-gravel road in several photographs that were
introduced into evidence. Mr. Friedman also testified that before building the new
road, he had commissioned the services of a surveyor to document the proposed
location, and the surveyor’s plat showing the proposed location of the new road was
introduced into evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213. While testifying about the new
road, Mr. Friedman drew a red line on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213 showing the route of
the road that had been built.
At the end of the first phase of the trial, when the jury returned its special
verdict identifying the final location of the easement, the jury found, as previously
noted, that the easement had been relocated in “Fall 2008” and labeled its hand-drawn
line of the final location of the easement on the redacted plat as the “New-Relocated
Road.” The jury’s hand-drawn line of the easement on the redacted plat closely
13
approximated the route of the new road as drawn by Mr. Friedman on Plaintiff’s
Exhibit 213.
Based on this trial evidence, the special verdict form, and the redacted plat, it
is clear that the jury intended for the final location of the easement to be the new road
built by Mr. Friedman along the southern boundary of the M. P. defendants’ property
in Fall 2008. Thus, for the amended judgment to properly conform to the reasonable
intendment of the jury’s verdict, the new road built by Mr. Friedman in Fall 2008 had
to fall within the boundaries of the plotted easement incorporated into the judgment.
Here, however, the survey ordered by the trial court on remand and
incorporated into the judgment includes a small area where the road labeled “existing
gravel drive” near the southern boundary of the M. P. defendant’s property falls
outside the boundaries of the plotted easement. And the route of the “existing gravel
drive” shown on the survey is consistent with the route of the new road built by Mr.
Friedman in Fall 2008 as reflected in the trial evidence, including Plaintiff’s Exhibit
213, the plat of the proposed new road that Mr. Friedman marked during his
testimony, and Defense Exhibit 5-B, another survey of the property showing the
aforesaid “gravel drive.” Thus, the survey shows that a portion of the new road built
by Mr. Friedman in Fall 2008 falls outside the boundaries of the plotted easement
14
incorporated into the amended judgment by the trial court. Accordingly, because the
jury clearly intended for the easement to encompass the new road built by Mr.
Friedman in Fall 2008, we conclude that the trial court erred by amending the
judgment on remand in a manner that failed to conform to the reasonable intendment
of the verdict and the evidence presented at trial regarding the location of the new
road. See OCGA §§ 9-12-4; 9-12-9; Turley, 244 Ga. at 809; R. C. Acres I, 331 Ga.
App. at 769 (3); Kaufman Dev. Partners, 324 Ga. App. at 75-76 (3).
In reaching this conclusion, we reject the defense argument, accepted by the
trial court, that the jury’s intent in reaching its verdict was conclusively demonstrated
by the actual line drawn by jurors on the redacted plat, and that the survey
incorporated into the judgment had to be based strictly on the hand-drawn line.
“Verdicts . . . shall receive a reasonable construction,” OCGA § 9-12-4, and here the
only reasonable construction of the verdict is that the jury meant for the easement to
be placed along the new road built by Mr. Friedman in Fall 2008, rather than some
slightly different, alternative course that would require R. C. to relocate a portion of
the road for no apparent purpose and at additional expense. This is particularly true
when the jury’s freehand drawing is viewed in conjunction with the finding in the
special verdict form that the easement was relocated in “Fall 2008” and with the
15
labeling of the hand-drawn line as the “New-Relocated Road.” Furthermore, the
redacted plat provided to the jury did not include an outline of the new road, and lay
jurors of course are not professional land surveyors, and thus it is not surprising that
the freehand line drawn by the jurors did not perfectly match the location of the new
road on the ground. Consequently, the slight deviation between the jury’s hand-drawn
line and the actual roadway does not alter our conclusion that the jury intended for
the new road as built in Fall 2008 to be final location of the easement.
The M. P. defendants also contend that the freehand line drawn by the jury on
the redacted plat for the final location of the easement precisely matches the route of
the road as hand-drawn by Mr. Friedman on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213. Consequently,
the M. P. defendants maintain that there was an evidentiary basis for where the jury
specifically drew the line on the plat, that the jury in fact gave R. C. the easement that
it requested, and that the trial court properly based the survey of the final location of
the easement on the exact line drawn by the jury.
However, we have compared the jury’s redacted plat to Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213,
and the line drawn by the jury for the route of the new road does not entirely match
the line drawn by Mr. Friedman. Furthermore, the redacted plat used by the jury is
somewhat larger in size than the plat shown on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213, and the
16
graphic scales on the two plats are slightly different. Thus, while the jury’s freehand
line drawn on the redacted plat may be a close approximation of the line drawn by
Mr. Friedman on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213, the two lines are not the same.
Furthermore, the M. P. defendants’ argument about the matching lines is
predicated on the incorrect assumption that the line drawn freehand by Mr. Friedman
on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213 at trial was intended to be an exact rendering of the route
of the new road. Mr. Friedman was not a trained surveyor, and after depicting the
route of the new road on the exhibit, he was asked on cross-examination, “That’s all
you want the jury to give you is this new road we built?,” and he replied, “That’s what
we had agreed upon, yes, sir.” When asked again later in his testimony about the final
location of the easement, Mr. Friedman reiterated, “I would love to use the road that
I built. I want to use the road that I built.”
It is clear from Mr. Friedman’s testimony that he was requesting that the jury
place the final location of the easement along the new road as built in Fall 2008, and
that his freehand rendering of the route of the new road on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 213,
when viewed in context, was intended to be his best approximation of that route,
rather than the precise rendering of an expert land surveyor. Thus, to the extent that
the jury relied upon Mr. Friedman’s line in attempting to depict the final location of
17
the easement on the redacted plat, the jury was doing nothing more than signaling that
the final easement should be placed along the new road as built in Fall 2008, as Mr.
Friedman had requested and made clear in his testimony.
Additionally, the M. P. defendants argue that the jury did not and could not
have intended to place the final location of the easement precisely along the new road
built by Mr. Friedman because if the road had been used as the centerline of the
easement, a few feet of the 60-foot wide easement would have encroached onto a
neighboring property in one location. But the M. P. defendants’ argument is based on
the erroneous assumption that the jury was drawing a line that was intended to
represent the precise centerline of the easement, with the easement’s boundary to be
placed exactly 30 feet on each side of their line. That is not what the jury was
instructed to do. The jury was simply instructed to draw a single line representing the
final route of the easement, without any reference in the instructions to the centerline
or how the precise 60-foot wide boundary of the easement would be determined.
Indeed, the trial court instructed the jury “not to consider the issue of the width of .
. . [the] relocated easement” as part of its deliberations. Hence, whether or to what
extent the centerline of the new road as built in Fall 2008 was less than 30 feet from
18
the boundary line of the M.P. defendant’s property on one side simply had no bearing
on the jury’s verdict reached in this case.6
Lastly, the M. P. defendants allege that R. C. altered the route of the new road
post-verdict and judgment, such that R. C. is now seeking entry of an amended
judgment awarding a final easement location different from what it sought at trial.
The M. P. defendants argument is without merit and has no support in the record. To
support their allegation that the new road had been altered, the M. P. defendants rely
solely on argument of counsel and unsworn statements made at a trial court hearing
conducted on remand, neither of which constitute compete evidence. See Watson v.
Ga. Dept. of Transp., 288 Ga. App. 40, 42, n.2 (653 SE2d 763) (2007) (counsel’s
statements at hearing are not evidence); Parker v. Silviano, 284 Ga. App. 278, 279
(1) (643 SE2d 819) (2007) (“unsworn allegations are not evidence”) (citation
omitted). Hence, there is no competent evidence of record that any work was
6
We also note that there was no requirement, based on the verdict and evidence
presented at trial, that the new road be used as the centerline of the 60-foot easement
for purposes of reducing the final location of the easement to a metes-and-bounds
description as part of the amended judgment. Rather, to be consistent with the
reasonable intendment of the verdict and the trial evidence, the new road simply had
to come within the 60-foot boundary of the easement as plotted.
19
performed on the new road after the trial or that the new road has been moved from
where it was built in Fall 2008.
In sum, the jury’s findings in the special verdict form and the jury’s drawing
and labeling of the easement on the redacted plat, when viewed in conjunction with
the evidence presented at trial, demonstrate that the jury intended for the final
location of the easement to be along the new road as built by Mr. Friedman on the M.
P. defendants’ property in Fall 2008. Because the trial court amended the judgment
on remand to incorporate a survey that excluded a portion of the new road from the
easement, the amended judgment does not conform to the reasonable intendment of
the verdict and the evidence presented at trial. We therefore must reverse the amended
judgment and remand for the trial court to conform the judgment to the jury’s verdict
and the evidence in a manner consistent with this opinion. See Taylor v. Taylor, 212
Ga. 637, 638 (1) (94 SE2d 744) (1956) (judgment did not conform to verdict, where
judgment included award of property to wife different from what was intended by the
jury in light of the pleadings and evidence presented at trial); Pinkerton & Laws v.
Macro Constr., 226 Ga. App. 169, 172 (4) (b) (485 SE2d 797) (1997) (trial court
ordered to amend judgment to reflect true meaning and intent of jury to enter award
in favor of general contractor on its claim for breach of subcontract). Compare Norton
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Realty & Loan Co. v. Bd. of Ed. of Hall County, 129 Ga. App. 668, 673-674 (3) (200
SE2d 461) (1973) (trial court properly amended judgment to incorporate a plat and
thereby conform the description of certain condemned lands to the evidence and
verdict, where it was clear that “the amendment had the effect merely of carrying out
the intendment of the original verdict”) (citations and punctuation omitted).
Judgment reversed and case remanded with direction. Boggs and Rickman, JJ.,
concur.
21