BAGWELL v. TRAMMEL et al.
S15A0820
Supreme Court of Georgia
October 5, 2015
RECONSIDERATION DENIED NOVEMBER 2, 2015
297 Ga. 873 | 778 SE2d 173
THOMPSON, Chief Justice.
claim for just compensation, State Bd. of Ed. v. Drury, 263 Ga. 429, 430 (1) (437 SE2d 290) (1993), but this claim fails for another reason. An unconstitutional taking claim requires the taking of a valid property interest. See id. at 431 (1). Layer claims an interest in the pumping capacity of the station only by virtue of his alleged agreement with the County, but as we have explained already, because that agreement was never reduced to writing, it does not bind the County, see Graham v. Beacham, 189 Ga. 304, 306 (5 SE2d 775) (1939), and so, it conferred upon Layer no valid property rights as against the County (or those whom the County might permit to use the sewer pumping station). For want of a valid property interest, the taking claim fails. See Drury, 263 Ga. at 433 (1).
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED OCTOBER 5, 2015 — RECONSIDERATION DENIED NOVEMBER 2, 2015.
Conowal, Welch & Womack, Christopher W. Conowal, for appellant.
Jarrard & Davis, Angela E. Davis, Kenneth P. Robin; Chambless Higdon Richardson Katz & Griggs, Mary M. Katz, for appellees.
S15A0820. BAGWELL v. TRAMMEL et al.
(778 SE2d 173)
Following a bench trial in this action arising out of a joint venture contract between appellant Thomas Bagwell and appellees Bobby and Oretta Trammel (the “Trammels“), the trial court denied Bagwell‘s claim for specific performance of the contract but granted his claims for an equitable partition of real property jointly owned by the parties and dissolution of the joint venture. Bagwell challenges the trial court‘s final order on several grounds, and for the reasons that follow, we affirm.
The record shows that in January 2000, Bagwell and the Trammels entered into a Joint Venture Agreement (the “Agreement“), which created an entity known as Etowah Ventures. As part of the Agreement, Bagwell agreed to cancel notes to him that were owed or guaranteed by the Trammels and valued in excess of $1,875,000. In exchange, the Trammels conveyed to Bagwell a one-half undivided interest in approximately 103 acres of real estate to be held as joint tenants in common. The Agreement further provided that legal title to the joint venture property would be held by either or both of the Trammels in trust for the benefit of Etowah Ventures and that upon the sale of the joint venture property, Bagwell would be entitled to be paid the original principal amounts of the cancelled notes, as well as the interest that already had accrued and interest that would have accrued under the cancelled notes. Any additional proceeds were to be evenly divided between Bagwell and the Trammels.
By August 2002, none of the joint venture property had been sold and the Trammels were in need of additional monies, so the parties entered into a second contract (the “Redemption Agreement“) which amended the original Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of the Redemption Agreement, Bagwell agreed to advance $600,000 to the Trammels against their share of future sales proceeds from the sale of joint venture property and a new formula (the “Redemption Formula“) was established for the redemption of Etowah Ventures which enhanced Bagwell‘s equity position by entitling him to a greater percentage of future sales proceeds.
By August 2004, approximately 73.6 acres of the joint venture property had been sold and the Redemption Formula had been applied to distribute the proceeds from those
In May 2013, the Trammels’ sons agreed to quitclaim the property back to their parents. Bagwell thereafter filed several amendments to his complaint reflecting the transfer of the property back to the Trammels to be held for the benefit of Etowah Ventures, eliminating those counts that had factually relied on the transfer of the property, and adding claims for an equitable dissolution and accounting of Etowah Ventures under
After a three-day bench trial, the trial court entered a final judgment (1) granting Bagwell‘s requests for an equitable accounting and equitable partitioning and providing for the equitable dissolution of Etowah Ventures and (2) directing that upon the sale of the joint venture property, the Trammels, collectively, and Bagwell would each be entitled to one-half of the net sales proceeds.1 In granting this relief, the trial court specifically held that the Agreement operated as a valid deed under
1. Bagwell in several enumerations of error argues that the trial court erred by denying his claim for specific performance of the Redemption Agreement insofar as it applied to the remaining 29 acres of joint venture property.
The record reflects the trial court‘s holding that Bagwell was not entitled to the equitable remedy of specific performance because what he was actually seeking in his complaint was to recover his interest in the value of the remaining 29 acres, and therefore, monetary damages available through the filing of a contract claim would have provided him with adequate compensation. Bagwell challenges the trial court‘s rulings regarding the availability and adequacy of legal damages on numerous grounds. We need not address these grounds, however, because our review of the record demonstrates an alternate basis for the trial court‘s determination that Bagwell failed to show his entitlement to the extraordinary remedy of specific performance.
As a general rule, a party to a contract may seek specific performance of a contract upon a showing that damages recoverable at law would not constitute adequate
2. We similarly find no error in the trial court‘s determination that the original Agreement could be construed as a valid deed. Pursuant to
It is undisputed that within section two of the original, written Agreement signed by the parties, the Trammels conveyed to Bagwell a one-half undivided interest in the joint venture property specifically described in the note attached to and incorporated by reference. Accordingly, we find no error in the trial court‘s ruling that this section of the Agreement operated as a valid deed granting Bagwell a one-half interest in the joint venture property.
3. As alternatives to his claim for specific performance, Bagwell sought an equitable partition of the remaining 29 acres
In ruling on a claim for an equitable partition, a trial court has broad discretion to consider all of the circumstances that make a proceeding in equity more suitable and just, including the need to adjust the accounts or claims of the co-tenants. See
Instead,
Accordingly, we find no abuse of the trial court‘s broad discretion in making its equitable award. Although the dissent would seek a more affirmative confirmation from the trial
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur except Melton, J., who concurs in part and dissents in part.
MELTON, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
While I agree with Divisions 1 and 2 of the majority opinion, I must respectfully dissent from Division 3. My problem is not with the majority‘s analysis in Division 3, but with the fact that the trial court employed none of this analysis when it decided, contrary to the terms of the parties’ Redemption Agreement, that Bagwell and the Trammels were each entitled to one-half of the net sales proceeds from the sale of the Etowah Ventures property. Following the closing on the property, there was a subsequent meeting of the minds between the parties, consummated in a Redemption Agreement. The Redemption Agreement called for a 70/30 split in the sales proceeds from the sale of the Etowah Ventures property, rather than a 50/50 split as was imposed by the trial court. There is no question as to the validity of the parties’ contract. Therefore, it is the key document to be considered with respect to the division of sales proceeds from the sale of the Etowah Ventures property. However, the trial court provided no analysis at all in its final order regarding the impact of the Redemption Agreement on the division of proceeds from the sale of the Etowah Ventures property. That being the case, we have no way of knowing whether the trial court actually engaged in the necessary analysis to reach the result that it did here. I therefore do not believe that we can affirm the trial court‘s decision on the grounds stated by the majority. I believe that we must vacate the trial court‘s order and remand this case to the trial court with the direction that it analyze the impact of the Redemption Agreement on its equitable partition decision.
The trial court‘s decision to completely omit any actual analysis relating to the Redemption Agreement in its final order on the bench trial in this case is troubling, especially when one considers that the trial court itself recognized the importance of this agreement in its order on the Trammels’ motion for summary judgment:
[O]n August 31, 2002, Bagwell [and the Trammels] entered into [an] Agreement of Redemption of Joint Venture Interests (hereinafter “Redemption Agreement“). The purpose of the Redemption Agreement was to “conclusively establish their respective interests in Etowah Ventures by mutually adopting a formula and program of redemption which settles any and all issues between the parties and provides for a self effectuating dissolution” in the future of Etowah Ventures. The parties to the Redemption Agreement stated ... that upon the sale of the properties, the parties would divide the proceeds based upon a distribution formula through Etowah Ventures.
The trial court then goes on in its summary judgment order to state:
Section Three of the Redemption Agreement is clear and unambiguous. It describes the self-effectuating dissolution of Etowah Ventures. It discusses the parties’ respective payment obligations. It refers to the earlier provisions within the Redemption Agreement describing the calculations of the parties’ shares of the closing moneys resulting from the sale of the property. Accordingly, there is no question as to the redemption process.
Despite the fact that there was “no question as to the redemption process,” and despite the fact that the Redemption Agreement allowed Bagwell to receive roughly 70% of the proceeds from any sale of the joint venture property and allowed the Trammels to receive roughly 30% of such proceeds, the trial court makes no mention of this legally
Worse still, through its ruling, the trial court has essentially nullified the legally binding Redemption Agreement. Specifically, now that the trial court has declared that a 50/50 split shall take place with respect to the sale of the Etowah Ventures property, that ruling has become binding on the parties and Bagwell can do nothing to challenge it — despite the fact that he holds a valid legal agreement requiring a 70/30 split of the proceeds. At the very least, the trial court must offer some analysis as to why it would be authorized to basically ignore, and essentially nullify, the parties’ previously agreed to 70/30 split of sales proceeds in its ruling on equitable partition when it had previously ruled that there was “no question as to the [70/30] redemption process.” However, based on the trial court‘s final order, it appears as though the trial court may have failed to consider the Redemption Agreement altogether. As a result, it cannot be conclusively said that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it decided, contrary to the clear and unambiguous terms of the Redemption Agreement, that it was authorized to discount the agreement entirely and impose a 50/50 split on sales proceeds in a manner that runs directly contrary to the parties’ prior agreement.
I would therefore vacate the trial court‘s decision and remand this case for further proceedings.
DECIDED OCTOBER 5, 2015 — RECONSIDERATION DENIED NOVEMBER 2, 2015.
George E. Butler II, for appellant.
Elrod & Elrod, Christopher D. Elrod; R. Thad McCormack, for appellees.
Notes
The trial court entered a contemporaneous order appointing a receiver to carry out the equitable accounting and partitioning, charging the receiver with overseeing the sale of the property [the “Joint Venture Property“] obtaining an appraisal of the property if necessary, obtaining a survey of the property if necessary, and ensuring that the property is partitioned and sold within a reasonable period of time and at the highest price available in the market.
Upon the sale of the property, the Trammels are, collectively, entitled to fifty (50) percent of the net sales proceeds and Bagwell is entitled to fifty (50) percent of the net sales proceeds as an equitable accounting and partitioning of the dissolved joint venture.
See Waycross Military Assn. v. Hiers, 209 Ga. 812, 814-815 (4) (76 SE2d 486) (1953) (holding that equitable partition may be accomplished through and by receivership). The trial court previously had granted summary judgment in favor of the Trammels on Bagwell‘s claims seeking dissolution of the joint venture under
The dissent incorrectly states that the trial court makes no mention of the Redemption Agreement in its final order. The trial court made factual findings in its order on summary judgment and these findings were expressly adopted into the trial court‘s final order. Included in the trial court‘s findings on motion for summary judgment is that court‘s recognition that the parties entered into the Redemption Agreement and that the Redemption Agreement (1) established their respective interests in Etowah Ventures by adopting the Redemption Formula and (2) provided for a self-effectuating dissolution of Etowah Ventures. The court in its summary judgment order also acknowledged the continuing validity of Redemption Agreement when it stated that Bagwell could seek legal remedies based on the parties’ contracts to protect his interest in the joint venture property. Finally, the findings incorporated into the final order include an acknowledgment of the parties’ intention when entering into their contracts that Etowah Ventures would continue to exist until all joint venture property was sold, the parties mutually agreed to termination of the joint venture, the death of one of the parties, or the impossibility of performance.
