Toyo Tire North America Manufacturing, Inc. v. Davis , 299 Ga. 155 ( 2016 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: June 6, 2016
    S15G1804. TOYO TIRE NORTH AMERICA MANUFACTURING INC. v.
    DAVIS et al.
    NAHMIAS, Justice.
    Toyo Tire North America Manufacturing Inc. operates a large tire
    manufacturing and distribution facility about 625 feet from the home of Lynn
    and Duron Davis. The Davises sued Toyo Tire, alleging that its facility is a
    nuisance and has resulted in a trespass, causing them discomfort and annoyance
    and diminishing their property’s value. The trial court denied Toyo Tire’s
    motion for summary judgment; the Court of Appeals affirmed that order; and we
    granted certiorari to address two issues.
    First, we consider Toyo Tire’s argument that the Davises presented
    insufficient evidence, at the summary judgment stage of the case, to show that
    the decrease in their property value was proximately caused by the alleged
    nuisance and trespass. Applying the standards used in reviewing summary
    judgment motions, we reject this argument. Second, we consider Toyo Tire’s
    argument that even if the Davises can establish causation, they cannot recover
    damages both for their discomfort and annoyance and for the diminution in their
    property value, because that would constitute an impermissible double recovery.
    Following a long line of this Court’s precedents as well as several cases from
    the Court of Appeals (except one case that we disapprove), we conclude that the
    past discomfort and annoyance caused by a continuing nuisance and the
    diminution in the property’s market value resulting from the expectation of
    continuing discomfort and annoyance constitute two separate injuries, and the
    Davises, who both occupy and own the property, may potentially recover
    damages for both injuries. Accordingly, we affirm.
    1.    Since 1995, the Davises have resided in a house they now own
    located on four acres in an area zoned for low-density residential or agricultural
    use at the intersection of U.S. Highway 411 and Shinall Road in Bartow County.
    In 2004, the property across the highway from the Davises was re-zoned for
    heavy industrial use, and Toyo Tire began building a manufacturing and
    distribution facility on about 260 acres across the road from the Davises. Since
    the facility began operating in January 2006, it has undergone three expansions.
    Upon completion of the first phase in October 2006, the facility had about 400
    2
    employees and was producing 3,000 tires a day. In 2008, the second phase was
    completed, and the facility had about 570 employees and produced 4,500 tires
    per day. In mid-2011, the third phase was completed, and the number of
    employees increased to about 1,000 and the number of tires per day increased
    to 13,500. In March 2014, when the plant manager was deposed for this case,
    the facility was undergoing its fourth expansion, which was expected to increase
    the number of employees to 1,450 and the number of tires per day to 19,178.
    Phases three and four both included increasing the size of the facility. Toyo Tire
    operates around the clock, with two 12-hour shifts every day.
    On October 25, 2007, the Davises sent a letter to Toyo Tire through their
    counsel, asserting that they planned to file a lawsuit for trespass, nuisance, and
    negligence, and requesting that Toyo Tire purchase their home (as it had done
    with the two properties next door to the Davises). Toyo Tire declined. On
    February 27, 2013, the Davises filed a complaint in Bartow County Superior
    Court alleging that the noise, lights, odors, black dust (alleged to be carbon
    black), and increased traffic from the facility, as well as its unsightliness,
    constitute a nuisance; they also alleged that the black dust emitted by the facility
    3
    constitutes a trespass.1 The Davises requested damages for Toyo Tire’s
    maintenance of a nuisance, damages in nuisance for the diminution in fair
    market value of their property, and damages for trespass.
    During discovery, the Davises were deposed, and they explained how
    Toyo Tire’s operations, including the loud noises, bright lights, odors, and black
    dust emissions from the facility, its equipment, and frequent truck deliveries, as
    well as the increased traffic from both trucks and employees, interfered with
    their use and enjoyment of the property and with their daily lives. They
    testified, for example, that their sleep is interrupted by the light and noise from
    the facility, and that they wear masks when they go outside and can no longer
    use their large yard for family gatherings because of the odors emitted from the
    facility, the danger from the increased traffic, and the carbon black that settles
    in their yard. Bruce Penn, a real estate appraisal expert hired by the Davises,
    was also deposed. He testified about appraisals done on their property, which
    indicated that its value without the Toyo Tire plant would be $280,000. He also
    1
    In addition, the Davises alleged that the diversion of water flow caused by the facility was
    a trespass, but at the hearing on Toyo Tire’s motion for summary judgment, the Davises conceded
    that this claim was barred by the statute of limitation, and the trial court entered summary judgment
    against them on that issue.
    4
    testified about his depreciation analysis, which led him to conclude that the
    nuisance of the Toyo Tire facility had decreased the value of the Davises’
    property by about 35 to 40%, with the black dust as a trespass decreasing the
    value by an additional 10 to 15%.
    On May 23, 2014, Toyo Tire filed a motion for summary judgment,
    arguing, among other things, that the Davises failed to prove that the specific
    interferences they alleged had caused their property value to decrease and that,
    under Georgia law, the Davises cannot recover both for diminution of property
    value and for discomfort and annoyance caused by a nuisance. Toyo Tire did
    not argue that Penn’s expert testimony was inadmissible or seek to exclude it
    under OCGA § 24-7-702. After a hearing, the trial court denied summary
    judgment, concluding that material issues of fact still exist in the case. The
    court certified the order for immediate review, and the Court of Appeals granted
    Toyo Tire’s application for interlocutory review and affirmed the trial court in
    a partially divided seven-judge opinion. See Toyo Tire North Am. Mfg., Inc.
    v. Davis, 
    333 Ga. App. 211
    (775 SE2d 796) (2015).
    Division 2 of the majority opinion held that the Davises had presented
    sufficient evidence that the alleged nuisance and trespass caused their property
    5
    to depreciate to survive summary judgment, because Penn’s expert testimony on
    that issue was properly considered even though he had not examined the
    Davises’ property or taken into account the precise allegations made by the
    Davises. See 
    id. at 216-217.
    In Division 4, the majority opinion rejected Toyo
    Tire’s argument that the Davises may not recover damages for both diminution
    in property value and personal discomfort and annoyance. Judge Dillard joined
    the majority opinion in judgment only. Judge Branch concurred fully in all but
    Division 2. Presiding Judge Andrews, joined by Judge Branch, dissented as to
    Division 2, and he concurred in the rest of the majority opinion in judgment
    only.
    We then granted Toyo Tires’s petition for a writ of certiorari, directing the
    parties to address whether the Court of Appeals erred in concluding (1) that an
    issue of fact remained as to whether the alleged nuisance and trespass
    proximately caused the Davises’ property value to decrease and (2) that the
    Davises could potentially recover in nuisance both for diminution in their
    property value and for their personal discomfort and annoyance. As explained
    below, we answer both questions in the negative and affirm the Court of
    6
    Appeals judgment.2
    2.      Toyo Tire first argues that the Davises have failed to present
    evidence sufficient to prove that the nuisance and trespass alleged caused a
    diminution in their property’s value, because the Davises’ appraisal expert,
    Bruce Penn, did not consider the specific interferences alleged by the Davises
    but rather looked at depreciation caused by “industries” in general. “Causation
    is an essential element of nuisance, trespass, and negligence claims. To
    establish proximate cause, a plaintiff must show a legally attributable causal
    connection between the defendant’s conduct and the alleged injury.” Toyo 
    Tire, 333 Ga. App. at 216
    (citing Alexander v. Hulsey Environmental Svcs., Inc., 
    306 Ga. App. 459
    , 462 (702 SE2d 435) (2010)).
    In his deposition, Penn explained that he had over 30 years of experience
    as a real estate appraiser, had done several hundred appraisals in Bartow County,
    and was certified in the top tier of licensing for appraising in Georgia. He
    2
    Toyo Tire also argued in its summary judgment motion that all of the Davises’ claims are
    barred by the statute of limitation, that the Davises failed to show the physical intrusion element of
    trespass, that increased traffic and facility unsightliness cannot be the basis for nuisance claims, and
    that there is no evidence Toyo Tire caused the black dust. The trial court and then the Court of
    Appeals rejected all of these arguments. Toyo Tire’s petition for certiorari asked this Court to review
    those issues too, but we did not request or receive briefing on them, and we render no opinion
    regarding them.
    7
    testified that in his expert opinion, the Toyo Tire facility and its black dust
    emissions caused the Davises’ property value to decrease by 50% – 35 to 40%
    due to the nuisance and 10 to 15% due to the black dust trespass. Penn arrived
    at this conclusion primarily by conducting a “paired sales” analysis, in which he
    compared the sales prices of three pairs of houses. One house in each pair was
    very close to an industrial facility in the vicinity of Bartow County, and the
    other was far away but still in the same general market area; the houses in each
    pair were otherwise similar. The three industrial facilities used were the
    Dobbins Air Reserve base, the Shaw plant, and the Budweiser plant. He based
    the additional decrease in value resulting from the black dust trespass on
    research he previously conducted to determine the decrease in the value of
    homes affected by concrete dust from a concrete recycling plant in west Atlanta.
    He also relied generally on other work he had done during his career examining
    the effects of industrial sites on residential property values.
    The dissent in the Court of Appeals focused on several aspects of Penn’s
    methodology that call into genuine question its validity and reliability, including
    Penn’s admission that he “did not gather any evidence about the specific
    invasions involved here or conduct any analysis of whether the other industrial
    8
    sites in his paired sales analysis involved similar situations.” Toyo 
    Tire, 333 Ga. App. at 221
    (Andrews, P.J., dissenting in part). It is appropriate to question
    why an expert of this type did not actually visit the industrial facilities and
    residential properties that he was comparing to better determine whether the
    interferences caused by an Air Force base, a carpet factory, and a beer-brewing
    facility are really similar in type and degree to the interferences allegedly caused
    by a tire manufacturing and distribution facility (or by each other). The flaw in
    the dissent’s analysis, however, is that these potential deficiencies in Penn’s
    methodology relate to whether his testimony should be admissible as expert
    opinion (and if so, what weight the fact-finder should give his testimony), not
    whether his opinions provide the evidence necessary on a motion for summary
    judgment to show causation. At this point in the case, only the latter question
    is properly presented for decision.
    As then-Judge Blackwell explained in An v. Active Pest Control South,
    Inc., 
    313 Ga. App. 110
    (720 SE2d 222) (2011):
    In some cases, we suppose, the admissibility or inadmissibility of
    evidence offered in support of, or in opposition to, a motion for
    summary judgment is so obvious that we properly can decide on
    appeal whether that evidence should have been considered, even
    without the court below having addressed it. But we must be
    9
    cautious about deciding questions of admissibility – including
    questions of the admissibility of expert opinions – upon which a
    trial court has not ruled. After all, questions of admissibility
    generally are committed to the sound discretion of the trial courts,
    and questions of the admissibility of expert opinions . . . are no
    different.
    
    Id. at 114-115.
    Toyo Tire has not challenged the admissibility of Penn’s expert
    testimony in the trial court, and that court therefore has not considered whether
    Penn’s methodology meets the requirements for expert testimony laid out in
    OCGA §§ 24-7-702 and 24-7-703.3                         See also Daubert v. Merrell Dow
    3
    OCGA § 24-7-702 says in relevant part:
    (a) . . . [T]he provisions of this Code section shall apply in all civil proceedings. The
    opinion of a witness qualified as an expert under this Code section may be given on
    the facts as proved by other witnesses.
    (b) If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact
    to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an
    expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education may testify thereto in
    the form of an opinion or otherwise, if:
    (1) The testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data;
    (2) The testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods;
    and
    (3) The witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the
    facts of the case which have been or will be admitted into evidence
    before the trier of fact. . . .
    (d) Upon motion of a party, the court may hold a pretrial hearing to determine
    whether the witness qualifies as an expert and whether the expert’s testimony
    satisfies the requirements of subsections (a) and (b) of this Code section. Such
    hearing and ruling shall be completed no later than the final pretrial conference
    contemplated under Code Section 9-11-16. . . .
    (f) It is the intent of the legislature that, in all civil proceedings, the courts of the State
    of Georgia not be viewed as open to expert evidence that would not be admissible in
    other states. Therefore, in interpreting and applying this Code section, the courts of
    this state may draw from the opinions of the United States Supreme Court in Daubert
    10
    Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    , 589 (113 SCt 2786, 125 LE2d 469) (1993).
    An appellate court should not conduct the analysis of Penn’s methodology
    in the first instance. See 
    An, 313 Ga. App. at 111
    (“Whether the opinions of the
    experts are admissible . . . is something that must be determined in the first
    instance by the court below, exercising its discretion under [what is now OCGA
    § 24-7-702].”). See also Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael, 
    526 U.S. 137
    ,
    147 (119 SCt 1167, 143 LE2d 238) (1999) (explaining that “Rule 702 imposes
    a special obligation upon a trial judge” to ensure that expert testimony is
    relevant and reliable (emphasis added)). As this Court emphasized in HNTB
    Georgia, Inc. v. Hamilton-King, 
    287 Ga. 641
    (697 SE2d 770) (2010),
    [W]hether “‘a witness is qualified to render an opinion as an expert
    is a legal determination for the trial court and will not be disturbed
    v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993); General Electric Co. v.
    Joiner, 
    522 U.S. 136
    (1997); Kumho Tire Co. Ltd. v. Carmichael, 
    526 U.S. 137
           (1999); and other cases in federal courts applying the standards announced by the
    United States Supreme Court in these cases.
    OCGA § 24-7-703 says, in relevant part:
    The facts or data in the particular proceeding upon which an expert bases an opinion
    or inference may be those perceived by or made known to the expert at or before the
    hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in
    forming opinions or inferences upon the subject, such facts or data need not be
    admissible in evidence in order for the opinion or inference to be admitted.
    These provisions of Georgia’s new Evidence Code carry forward former OCGA § 24-9-67.1.
    11
    absent a manifest abuse of discretion.’” . . . In determining the
    admissibility of expert testimony, the trial court acts as a
    gatekeeper, assessing both the witness’ qualifications to testify in
    a particular area of expertise and the relevancy and reliability of the
    proffered testimony. . . . There are many different kinds of experts
    and many different kinds of expertise, and it follows that the test of
    reliability is a flexible one, the specific factors “neither necessarily
    nor exclusively applying to all experts in every case.”
    
    Id. at 642-643
    (citations omitted).
    Consequently, “we will consider only whether the record as we now find
    it – including the opinions of the expert[] – is enough to get [the Davises] past
    summary judgment.” 
    An, 313 Ga. App. at 116
    . And because we are reviewing
    a motion for summary judgment, we must
    construe the evidence most favorably towards the nonmoving party,
    who is given the benefit of all reasonable doubts and possible
    inferences. The party opposing summary judgment is not required
    to produce evidence demanding judgment for it, but is only required
    to present evidence that raises a genuine issue of material fact. Our
    review of the grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment is
    de novo.
    Nguyen v. Southwestern Emergency Physicians, P.C., 
    298 Ga. 75
    , 82 (779 SE2d
    334) (2015) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Toyo Tire maintains that even if Penn’s testimony is admissible, the
    Davises have failed to show causation.           We disagree.      Although Penn
    12
    acknowledged in his deposition that he had not visited the Davises’ property or
    considered separately each specific claim of interference the Davises have made,
    he also testified that he was made generally aware of the characteristics of the
    Toyo Tire facility, including its “round-the-clock shifts” and the “middle of the
    night traffic,” and interferences resulting from those characteristics, such as
    increased traffic, lights, noise, and emissions; he explained his belief that these
    are common byproducts of industry.4 Viewed in its full context and with the
    charity required in the summary judgment setting, Penn’s conclusion was not
    that Toyo Tire’s mere presence near the Davises’ property was a nuisance, but
    that the facility’s industrial operations (which he would expect to include things
    like odors, light, noise, and traffic) caused the value of the Davises’ adjacent
    property to diminish.5
    4
    Toyo Tire complains that Penn relied on facts conveyed to him by the Davises’ attorney,
    but an expert may provide an opinion based on facts and data “made known to the expert at or before
    the hearing” if those facts and data are “of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular
    field.” OCGA § 24-7-703. Indeed, experts commonly offer opinions in the form of answers to
    hypothetical questions posed by lawyers. If there is a problem with the source of Penn’s information,
    again the solution is for Toyo Tire to raise that issue in the trial court through a motion to exclude
    Penn’s testimony.
    5
    Toyo Tire points to portions of Penn’s deposition to argue that his opinions on the
    diminution of value were based solely on the proximity of Toyo Tire’s facility to the Davises’
    property. Although some of Penn’s statements (and some parts of the Court of Appeals majority
    opinion) might be read this way in isolation, Penn’s testimony read in full indicates that he
    considered the Toyo Tire facility’s proximity to the Davises’ home not as the sole basis for his
    13
    The testimony from the Davises amply described the alleged nuisance and
    the specific interferences coming from it, so this is not a case where there is no
    evidence that the alleged nuisance has interfered with the plaintiffs’ property.
    Compare Lore v. Suwanee Creek Homeowners Assn., Inc., 
    305 Ga. App. 165
    ,
    172 (699 SE2d 332) (2010) (holding that the defendants were entitled to
    summary judgment when the plaintiffs presented no evidence, expert or
    otherwise, that the alleged nuisance actually increased water runoff). The
    Davises also testified about the black dust coming across the road from the tire
    factory onto their property, and Penn factored that alleged trespass into his
    diminution of value calculations. In sum, although it might not convince a jury
    at trial, the combined testimony of Penn and the Davises suffices to defeat Toyo
    Tire’s challenge to causation on motion for summary judgment. See 
    Nguyen, 298 Ga. at 84
    (“‘[I]f a defendant . . . moves for summary judgment and points
    to the favorable testimony of a dozen winners of the Nobel Prize for Medicine
    . . . , but the plaintiff responds with the admissible testimony of a barely
    qualified medical expert . . . , the trial court must assume – as unlikely as it may
    conclusions, but as important in his valuation of the property because the location relates to the ways
    in which the property is affected by the bothersome side effects of the facility’s operations.
    14
    be – that the jury will believe the plaintiff’s expert and disbelieve the expert
    array offered by the defendant.’” (citation omitted)). Accordingly, the Court of
    Appeals did not err in affirming the trial court’s denial of Toyo Tire’s summary
    judgment motion on this issue.6
    3.      We turn now to the second question presented – whether allowing
    the Davises to seek to recover both for their discomfort and annoyance caused
    by the alleged nuisance and for the diminution in their property value would
    permit a double recovery.7 OCGA § 41-1-4 says, “[a] private nuisance may
    6
    Toyo Tire and its amici from the business community warn that our affirming the Court
    of Appeals will result in many more nuisance cases surviving summary judgment. We do not know
    if that would be bad or good; it would depend on the facts of those cases. We do know that if a
    defendant believes that the methodology of the plaintiff’s expert is so unreliable that the plaintiff
    should not even be allowed to present the expert’s testimony as evidence, the solution is to move to
    exclude the expert testimony under OCGA § 24-7-702. If, on the other hand, the defendant would
    prefer to exploit the expert’s apparent weaknesses in front of the jury at trial, the defendant may
    choose not to file such a pretrial challenge. That strategy, however, will usually preclude the
    defendant from arguing that the court should ignore the expert’s testimony in deciding a motion for
    summary judgment.
    7
    Given the Davises’ clear deposition testimony about the discomfort and annoyance they
    have suffered and this Court’s clear holding that the determination of such damages does not require
    expert calculations but is committed to “the enlightened conscience of the jury,” Columbus v.
    Myszka, 
    246 Ga. 571
    , 573 (272 SE2d 302) (1980), Toyo Tire does not contend that the Davises
    cannot prove these damages. We note that if Toyo Tire prevailed on its first argument – if the
    Davises could not get diminution of value damages – then Toyo Tire would have no basis for
    arguing that there is a potential for double recovery and the second issue presented would be moot.
    Because we have rejected Toyo Tire’s first argument and concluded that, based on the evidence
    currently in the record, the jury could find that the Davises have established causation of their
    diminished property value, we will proceed to decide the second issue.
    15
    injure either a person or property, or both, and for that injury a right of action
    accrues to the person who is injured or whose property is damaged.” Georgia
    courts have made it clear in nuisance and trespass cases, however, that a plaintiff
    cannot recover twice for the same injury. See, e.g., Georgia Northeastern R. Co.
    v. Lusk, 
    277 Ga. 245
    , 246 (587 SE2d 643) (2003) (explaining that the plaintiff
    property owner could not recover for both the cost of restoring the stability of
    the riverbank and the diminution of value caused by the destabilized condition
    of the riverbank); Swift v. Broyles, 
    115 Ga. 885
    , 890 (
    42 S.E. 277
    ) (1902)
    (holding that the plaintiff could not recover both for “the diminution of rental
    value of the premises during a time when they were occupied by plaintiff
    himself” and for “the physical discomforts and pain of plaintiff and his family
    during the same period”).
    In Stanfield v. Waste Management of Georgia, Inc., 
    287 Ga. App. 810
    (652 SE2d 815) (2007), the Court of Appeals cited these two double recovery
    cases and declared: “The law is . . . clear that a plaintiff [in a nuisance action]
    may not recover for both discomfort and diminution of value.” 
    Id. at 812.
    In
    this case, citing City of Atlanta v. Hofrichter/Stiakakis, 
    291 Ga. App. 883
    , 890
    (652 SE2d 815) (2008), the Court of Appeals declared just the opposite: “It is
    16
    well settled . . . that a plaintiff in an action for nuisance may recover for both
    damage to person and damage to property.” Toyo 
    Tire, 333 Ga. App. at 219
    .
    Toyo Tire had cited and discussed Stanfield in its briefs, and the Court of
    Appeals should not have ignored this seemingly contradictory precedent.
    Nevertheless, as we will explain, Stanfield was a mistaken step off a long
    and firm path of Georgia law, and we disapprove it. Recovery for both past
    discomfort and annoyance and diminished property value has been consistently
    allowed by this Court and by the Court of Appeals in many cases for more than
    a century. See, e.g., 
    Swift, 115 Ga. at 887
    (explaining that the plaintiff could
    recover for all permanent injuries to his estate and for past discomfort and
    annoyance caused by the nuisance); Columbus v. Myszka, 
    246 Ga. 571
    , 573
    (272 SE2d 302) (1980) (explaining that a nuisance plaintiff is not “limited to
    recovery of property damages alone” but rather “[u]nlawful interference with the
    right of the owner to enjoy possession of his property may be an element of
    damages”); Oglethorpe Power Corp. v. Estate of Forrister, 
    332 Ga. App. 693
    ,
    706-711 (774 SE2d 755) (2015) (explaining that discomfort and annoyance
    damages to an occupant are an element of nuisance damages distinct from
    damages to property interests); Weller v. Blake, 
    315 Ga. App. 214
    , 216-217
    17
    (726 SE2d 698) (2012) (“Damages for discomfort and annoyance are separate
    and distinct damages from any damage to realty.”).8
    Stanfield failed to apprehend the crucial distinction between double
    recovery cases like Lusk and cases like this one. In the Lusk line of cases, both
    recoveries compensate the plaintiffs for essentially the same injury. In Lusk, for
    example, the money damages awarded to stabilize the riverbank would also
    reverse the diminution in property value due to that destabilization. 
    See 277 Ga. at 246-247
    . Any loss in value the property suffered because of its unstable
    riverbank would be eliminated when the riverbank was made stable again. In
    this way, the unstable riverbank and the resulting loss in property value were
    really one injury, which should be addressed by one recovery. Similarly, in
    Swift, this Court explained that because the diminution in a property’s rental
    value is a way to measure “the discomforts to which its use has been subjected”
    during that period, recovery for both would be double recovery for past
    8
    In addition, the occupant of the land may also recover for physical personal injury and for
    personal property damage suffered due to the nuisance. See, e.g., 
    Swift, 115 Ga. at 887
    -888
    (upholding recovery for the destruction of the plaintiff’s trees and for sickness in his family caused
    by the nuisance); Sam Finley, Inc. v. Russell, 
    75 Ga. App. 112
    , 118 (42 SE2d 452) (1947)
    (upholding recovery for “any physical and mental pain [the plaintiff] may have suffered as a result
    of his inhalation of the oily and smoky dust”); Towaliga Falls Power Co. v. Sims, 
    6 Ga. App. 749
    ,
    761 (
    65 S.E. 844
    ) (1909) (upholding recovery for personal illness and lost crops).
    18
    
    damages. 115 Ga. at 888
    , 890. See also Towaliga Falls Power Co. v. Sims, 
    6 Ga. App. 749
    , 761 (
    65 S.E. 844
    ) (1909) (explaining that the plaintiff could not
    recover damages both for the time he was prevented from working on his crop
    harvest due to nuisance-related illness and for the amount he had to pay
    replacement workers).
    By contrast, the alleged discomfort and annoyance experienced by the
    Davises and the alleged diminution in their property’s fair market value are two
    separate injuries that cannot be fixed by one recovery. Recovery for their
    discomfort and annoyance is designed to compensate them for what they have
    already experienced as residents of the property due to the Toyo Tire factory.
    Unlike the compensation that fixes the unstable riverbank once and for all,
    compensation for past discomfort and annoyance will not eliminate the
    discomfort and annoyance that will be experienced by future residents of the
    Davises’ property. That future discomfort and annoyance is reflected in the
    diminished fair market value of the property. This ongoing diminution in
    property value is therefore a second injury, which should be separately
    compensated (assuming it is proved at trial).
    The distinction between these injuries may be more easily grasped where
    19
    non-owner residents of the property suffer the discomfort and annoyance caused
    by a nuisance, and non-resident owners suffer the diminution in the value of
    their property. Both groups have been injured, and both can seek recovery
    under a theory of nuisance; when, as here, the residents and owners are the
    same, they can recover for both kinds of injuries. See 
    Swift, 115 Ga. at 887
    (“[T]he plaintiff, as owner of the premises described in his petition, was entitled
    to recover damages for all permanent injuries done to his freehold estate; and,
    as he occupied the premises himself, he also had a right to demand just
    compensation for such injuries as temporarily deprived him of the unrestricted
    use and full enjoyment of the same.”); 
    Forrister, 332 Ga. App. at 706-711
    . See
    also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 929 (1) (c) comment (1979) (“Discomfort
    and annoyance to an occupant of the land and to the members of the household
    are distinct grounds of compensation for which in ordinary cases the person in
    possession is allowed to recover in addition to the harm to his proprietary
    interests. . . .   The owner of land who is not an occupant is not entitled to
    recover for these harms except as they may have affected the rental value of his
    land.”).
    The distinction between the two kinds of damages is also clear in the
    20
    timing of the harms each is meant to address. “[T]he Davises’ allegations relate
    to invasions that are enduring in character and not readily alterable,” so they can
    (and did) elect to seek recovery for past and prospective damages in this action.
    See Toyo 
    Tire, 333 Ga. App. at 214
    . See also Cox v. Cambridge Square Towne
    Houses, Inc., 
    239 Ga. 127
    , 128 (236 SE2d 73) (1977) (“Since it clearly appears
    that this situation ‘will continue indefinitely,’ the [plaintiff] has the right to elect
    to treat the nuisance as temporary and sue for all those damages which have
    occurred within the past four years, or he may elect to sue for all future damages
    as well and put an end to the matter.” (citation omitted)).9
    The discomfort and annoyance damages would compensate the Davises
    for the interference with the use and enjoyment of their property that they have
    allegedly endured while living on the property. See Restatement (Second) of
    9
    Although referring to the “permanence” of Toyo Tire’s invasions, the Court of Appeals
    actually treated the alleged nuisance as “continuing” rather than “permanent,” which is consistent
    with the Davises’ claims and the trial court’s order. This means that the Davises can elect (but are
    not required) to recover for future damages in this case and their claims are not time-barred by the
    statute of limitation found in OCGA § 9-3-30 (a) “except as to damages for past invasions occurring
    more than four years before they filed their complaint.” Toyo 
    Tire, 333 Ga. App. at 214
    -215. See
    also Oglethorpe Power Corp. v. Forrister, 
    289 Ga. 331
    , 333 (711 SE2d 641) (2011) (discussing the
    difference between “continuing” and “permanent” nuisances). Although Toyo Tire disagrees with
    this conclusion, we did not grant its petition for certiorari to address this issue, and it has not been
    briefed. We therefore express no opinion on this point and simply accept the Court of Appeals’
    characterization of the Davises’ claim as one for continuing nuisance.
    21
    Torts § 929 (1) (c) (1979) (explaining that damages for harm to land resulting
    from a past invasion include “discomfort and annoyance to [the plaintiff] as an
    occupant”). See also Raymar, Inc. v. Peachtree Golf Club, Inc., 
    161 Ga. App. 336
    , 337 (287 SE2d 768) (1982); Towaliga 
    Falls, 6 Ga. App. at 760
    (“If the
    property is in the possession of a tenant, and the nuisance is of such a temporary
    nature as not to be likely to affect the premises after the expiration of the lease,
    the whole loss is to the tenant’s leasehold interest, and not also to the landlord’s
    reversion.”). The prospective damages available to the Davises as owners, on
    the other hand, are measured not through speculation about how much
    discomfort and annoyance they (or other occupants) may suffer in the future, but
    rather by how much the market value of their property has diminished based on
    the expectation of such continued discomfort and annoyance. See Restatement
    (Second) of Torts § 930 (3) (explaining that the prospective damages for
    continuing invasions include “either the decrease in the value of the land caused
    by the prospect of the continuance of the invasion . . . or the reasonable cost to
    the plaintiff of avoiding future invasions”). See also Cook v. Rockwell Intl
    Corp., 358 FSupp.2d 1003, 1010 (D. Colo. 2004) (describing the prospective
    damages contemplated by this Court’s decision in Cox as the decrease in the
    22
    value of the property caused by the ongoing nuisance or trespass).
    For these reasons, we adhere to the long line of Georgia precedent holding
    that recovery for both the backward-looking personal injury to the occupant and
    the forward-looking injury to the owner’s property value is available in a
    continuing nuisance case; we expressly overrule Stanfield; and we affirm the
    Court of Appeals’ holding that the Davises can potentially recover for their past
    discomfort and annoyance as well as the diminution in their property value.10
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    10
    We do not, however, endorse the Court of Appeals’ alternative holding that Toyo Tire’s
    attempt to limit the kinds of damages for which the Davises can recover is premature. Courts
    frequently grant partial summary judgment on the issue of whether a plaintiff can recover a certain
    kind of damages. See, e.g., J. Smith Lanier & Co. v. Southeastern Forge, Inc., 
    280 Ga. 508
    , 509 (630
    SE2d 404) (2006) (affirming grant of partial summary judgment on the issue of damages); Driskell
    v. Empire Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    249 Ga. App. 56
    , 62 (547 SE2d 360) (2001) (holding that the
    defendant was “entitled to partial summary judgment on the issue of recoverable damages”).
    23