'Worth Well Over $100M': Ex-Justice Nahmias Set to Argue for 200-Year-Old Wetland Grant
The Georgia Court of Appeals is set to wade into what has become a hot topic of late.
May 13, 2024 at 06:16 PM
4 minute read
What You Need to Know
- The state of Georgia has entered into a dispute over a quite title over coastal wetlands against a company that wants to 'restore and conserve' the land.
- Now the company needs to prove the legitimacy of an 1834 property grant to prevail.
- The trial court shot down both parties' motions for summary judgment, leading both to appeal the case.
On Tuesday the Georgia Court of Appeals is set to hear a dispute over who has the rightful ownership over "approximately 1,000 acres of coastal marshland."
Rights to Georgia's wetlands have been a hot topic of late, with the most high-profile dispute erupting over a company trying to open a mine on the edge of the Okefenokee Swamp. This appeal, on the other hand, concerns a different dimension of economic value.
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