Case Information
*1 THIRD DIVISION
BARNES, P. J.,
BOGGS and BRANCH, 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/
October 23, 2014 In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A14A1173. GWINNETT COUNTY v. OLD PEACHTREE
PARTNERS, LLC.
B ARNES , Presiding Judge.
This is the second appearance of this case arising out of a settlement in which
Gwinnett County agreed to, among other things, purchase 16.203 acres of property
from Old Peachtree Partners, LLC for the price of $5.2 million. The settlement was
reached to resolve all of the pending litigation between the parties, including a
condemnation action that had been filed by the County. The trial court initially
concluded that the settlement agreement was unenforceable, but this Court reversed
and held that the County was bound by the settlement. See
Old Peachtree Partners,
LLC v. Gwinnett County
,
This case began with Gwinnett County filing two lawsuits seeking to acquire property owned by Old Peachtree for a public road extension project. [1] Old Peachtree owned two adjacent parcels of property in Gwinnett County located in the area of the road extension, the first parcel consisting of 1.867 acres and the second parcel consisting of 16.203 acres. In the first lawsuit filed against Old Peachtree in April 2008, the County asserted claims for specific performance and breach of contract, seeking to enforce the terms of an option agreement to purchase Old Peachtree’s first parcel of property for $1,100,000. Old Peachtree answered, alleging that the County had failed to satisfy a condition precedent to exercising the option. Old Peachtree also asserted counterclaims for fraud and for inverse condemnation of its second parcel of property, contending that the County’s installation of a sewer line across its *3 property after acquiring the first parcel would destroy Old Peachtree’s ability to develop the second parcel.
While the first lawsuit was pending, the County filed a second lawsuit against Old Peachtree. The second suit was a condemnation action instituted for the purpose of acquiring Old Peachtree’s first parcel of property for the road extension.
In the summer of 2009, the parties began to discuss a settlement to resolve the pending litigation, including the condemnation action. Old Peachtree presented the County with a written offer of settlement on May 1, 2009, and on May 5, 2009, the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners (the “Board”) met in executive session and rejected the offer. However, the Board authorized the county attorney to present Old Peachtree with a counteroffer of settlement to resolve both pending lawsuits, and the attorney conveyed the counteroffer to Old Peachtree by letter dated May 8, 2009. The counteroffer included payment by the County of $1,100,000 for the first parcel that was the subject of the condemnation action, and $5,265,975 for the second parcel that Old Peachtree argued had been inversely condemned. Under the terms of the counteroffer, the County offered to settle all pending disputes between the parties in exchange for Old Peachtree agreeing to the aforementioned prices as payment for the *4 two parcels. On May 12, 2009, Old Peachtree, through its attorney, verbally accepted the County’s settlement counteroffer.
The parties began preparing the documents that were the subject of the settlement agreement, including a purchase and sale agreement, a final consent order, and a mutual general release. Old Peachtree signed and delivered the settlement documents to the County on June 13, 2009. However, on August 4, 2009, the Board voted against the purchase of Old Peachtree’s property.
After the County refused to carry out the settlement agreement, Old Peachtree filed a counterclaim in the first lawsuit for breach of that agreement. In its prayer for relief, Old Peachtree prayed for damages, prejudgment interest, and “such other and further relief as the [trial court] deem[ed] just, equitable and proper under the facts, circumstances, and evidence presented in this case.” The parties then filed cross- motions for summary judgment relating to the enforceability of the option agreement and the settlement agreement. The County argued, among other things, that the settlement agreement was unenforceable because approval of the purchase by the full Board at a public meeting was a condition precedent to the settlement that had not been satisfied. The trial court agreed with the County and ruled that the parties were not bound by the settlement.
Old Peachtree appealed the trial court’s ruling on the enforceability of the
settlement to this Court. We reversed the trial court, concluding that approval of the
full Board was not a condition of the settlement agreement and that the county
attorney had authority to extend the settlement counteroffer to Old Peachtree that was
accepted on May 12, 2009. See
Old Peachtree Partners I
,
After the Supreme Court of Georgia denied certiorari, Old Peachtree made written demands to the County on January 14, 2013 and February 1, 2013 seeking payment for the two parcels of Old Peachtree’s property referenced in the settlement agreement, plus prejudgment interest and other damages. The Board rejected the demands on February 5, 2013.
Old Peachtree then filed a motion to enforce the settlement agreement on February 22, 2013. Old Peachtree sought specific performance of the settlement agreement and prejudgment interest under OCGA § 7-4-15 on the purchase price owed by the County for the two parcels of Old Peachtree’s property. Old Peachtree also requested a trial on the incidental damages it allegedly had incurred as a result of the County’s refusal to carry through with the settlement agreement. Specifically, *6 Old Peachtree argued that it was entitled to recover the costs (i.e., property taxes, interest on the property’s mortgage, and property insurance) it had incurred in continuing to maintain the property since 2009 when the County should have taken possession of the property pursuant to the settlement agreement.
The County initially opposed the motion, but ultimately consented to the trial court awarding specific performance. On April 10, 2013, the trial court granted Old Peachtree’s motion to enforce the settlement agreement. The trial court ordered the County to tender into the court registry in the condemnation action the full amount it had agreed to pay for the first parcel of Old Peachtree’s property. The court further ordered the County to complete its purchase of the second parcel of Old Peachtree’s property for the agreed upon price of $5,265,975. The trial court reserved ruling on the issues of prejudgment interest and incidental damages.
Pursuant to the trial court’s enforcement order, on April 24, 2013, the County tendered the funds into the court registry in the condemnation action for the acquisition of Old Peachtree’s first parcel of property. On May 7, 2013, the County complied with the enforcement order and acquired Old Peachtree’s second parcel in exchange for the agreed-upon purchase price.
The trial court addressed the issue of prejudgment interest in a subsequent order entered on May 15, 2013. The trial court awarded prejudgment interest on the amount that the County had deposited into the court registry in the condemnation action for the first parcel of Old Peachtree’s property on April 24, 2013, but not on the $5,265,975 purchase price that had been paid by the County for the second parcel on May 7, 2013. The trial court accepted the County’s argument that the County was not obligated to pay prejudgment interest on the $5,265,975 because interest did not start to accrue on the purchase price until the County took actual possession of the second parcel, which did not occur until May 7, 2013, the same day that it made full payment to Old Peachtree. Consequently, the trial court found that no prejudgment interest was owed on the purchase price ultimately paid by the County for the second parcel.
Old Peachtree moved for reconsideration, contending that actual possession by the County of the second parcel was irrelevant in determining when prejudgment interest should start to accrue on the purchase price paid by the County. On October 16, 2013, the trial court granted Old Peachtree’s motion for reconsideration, reversed its prior order, and ruled that Old Peachtree was entitled to $1,458,089.97 in prejudgment interest on the purchase price that the County had paid for the second *8 parcel pursuant to OCGA § 7-4-15. The trial court also ruled that Old Peachtree was entitled to a trial to determine the extent of its incidental damages.
Following the entry of its order granting Old Peachtree’s motion for reconsideration, the trial court issued a certificate of immediate review.
We granted the County’s application for interlocutory appeal, and this appeal followed in which the County challenges the award of prejudgment interest and the grant of a trial on incidental damages.
1. The County contends that the trial court erred in granting Old Peachtree’s motion for reconsideration and awarding prejudgment interest on the purchase price of Old Peachtree’s second parcel of property under OCGA § 7-4-15. According to the County, Old Peachtree is prohibited from recovering prejudgment interest for three separate reasons: (a) interest did not begin to accrue until the County took actual possession of the second parcel; (b) Old Peachtree delayed requesting specific performance of the settlement agreement until after its successful appeal of the trial court’s initial ruling that the agreement was unenforceable; and (c) interest did not begin to accrue until the County became bound to pay the purchase price of the second parcel, which did not occur until this Court reversed the trial court regarding *9 the enforceability of the settlement and the closing on the property occurred on remand. We will address the County’s arguments each in turn.
(a) The County first argues that the trial court erred in awarding prejudgment interest on the purchase price of the second parcel under OCGA § 7-4-15 because interest should not have started to accrue until the County took actual possession of the parcel. We are unpersuaded.
OCGA § 7-4-15 provides in relevant part:
All liquidated demands, where by agreement or otherwise the sum to be paid is fixed or certain, bear interest from the time the party shall become liable and bound to pay them; if payable on demand, they shall bear interest from the time of the demand. . . .
Pursuant to this statutory language, if the amount owed under a contract is “fixed,
certain, and ascertainable under its terms,” the claim is liquidated.
Rivergate Corp.
v. Atlanta Indoor Advertising Concepts
,
There is no dispute regarding the purchase price that the County was required
to pay to Old Peachtree for its second parcel of property under the settlement
agreement – $5,265,975. Hence, the purchase price for the second parcel was fixed,
certain, and ascertainable under the terms of the parties’ contract, such that the debt
owed by the County was liquidated and subject to prejudgment interest under OCGA
§ 7-4-15. See
In re Estate of Miraglia
,
Generally speaking, prejudgment interest on an amount owed under a contract
starts to run on the date the amount becomes due and payable. See
Turner Constr. Co.
v. Elec. Distrib.
,
The parties’ settlement agreement is silent as to when the County was required
to pay the purchase price of $5,265,975 to Old Peachtree for the second parcel of
property. When no time for payment of the purchase price is specified in a contract
involving the sale of real estate, it is presumed that payment will be by cash upon
delivery of the deed at closing. See 2 Daniel F. Hinkel,
Pindar’s Ga. Real Estate Law
and Procedure
, § 18:32 (7th ed. 2013). See also
Harrell v. Stovall
,
However, relying upon
Adams v. Foster
,
In
Adams
, 141 Ga. at 439 (1), our Supreme Court stated in dicta that the
“general rule[] in cases for specific performance” is “that a purchaser in possession
of the realty which is the subject-matter of a contract must pay interest on the unpaid
purchase money from the time when his possession commenced,” but then went on
to find the rule inapplicable in that case. Subsequently, in
Lively
,
and after the date they acquired possession” of the property.
Lively
,
Subsequently, in
Shepard v. Gettys
,
Accordingly, because the County did not enter “immediately into possession”
of Old Peachtree’s second parcel of property, the rule enunciated in
Adams
and
Lively
*15
for the awarding of prejudgment interest has no application. Rather, the rule that
applies is that prejudgment interest began to run when the purchase money became
due and payable under the settlement agreement. See
Shepard
,
(b) The County next contends that the trial court erred in awarding prejudgment
interest on the purchase price of the second parcel because Old Peachtree delayed
requesting specific performance of the settlement agreement until after its successful
appeal to this Court in
Old Peachtree Partners I
,
In any event, the sole prerequisite for an award of prejudgment interest on a liquidated claim is that a demand be made before the entry of final judgment, so that the opposing party has an opportunity to contest an award of interest. Crisler , 290 Ga. at 864. Old Peachtree made written demands to the County on January 14, 2013 and February 1, 2013, and the County had a full and fair opportunity to contest an award of prejudgment interest in this case. Because the sole prerequisite for the award of prejudgment interest on a liquidated claim was satisfied, the County has failed to articulate a valid basis for reversal on this ground.
(c) The County also contends that the trial court erred in awarding prejudgment interest on the purchase price of the second parcel because interest did not begin to accrue until the County became bound to pay the purchase price of the second parcel, *17 which the County asserts did not occur until this Court reversed the trial court regarding the enforceability of the settlement and the closing on the property took place on remand. [4] Again, under the County’s reasoning, it would owe no prejudgment interest at all, given that the County made full payment of the purchase price for the second parcel at the closing that occurred on remand. However, as explained supra in Division 1 (a), the purchase price for the second parcel became due, and prejudgment interest started to run, on the date by which the closing on the second parcel should have occurred if there had been no breach by the County, which would have been long before the closing actually occurred in this case on remand. The County’s contention, therefore, is misplaced.
(d) For these combined reasons, we reject the County’s three specific
arguments that it raised in the court below and on appeal for why the trial court
should have awarded no prejudgment interest. We will not consider any additional
*18
arguments regarding the propriety of the trial court’s award of prejudgment interest
that were neither raised nor ruled upon in the court below, given that we do not apply
a “wrong for any reason” rule in evaluating an order on appeal. See, e.g.,
Lowery v.
Atlanta Heart Assoc.
,
2. The County also contends that the trial court erred in concluding that Old Peachtree was entitled to a trial on incidental damages. According to the County, Old Peachtree could not recover as incidental damages any of the costs it incurred in maintaining the second parcel from the time that the closing on the property should have occurred under the settlement agreement until the time that the actual closing took place. We disagree.
It is true that if a plaintiff obtains specific performance, he cannot also obtain
“an award of damages which would have resulted from the defendant’s failure to
perform the parties’ contract.”
Clayton v. Deverell
,
specific performance at the end of a protracted litigation under compulsion is practically never full performance of the contract; instead, there has been an extensive and injurious partial breach. In such a case, the court should decree the payment of damages for the partial breach that has already occurred, even though obedience of the decree will prevent the commission of further breaches.
Golden v. Frazier
,
In light of this precedent, the trial court did not err in ruling that Old Peachtree was entitled to pursue a claim for incidental damages at trial. At the very least, Old Peachtree would be entitled to present evidence aimed at proving the costs of maintaining insurance coverage on the second parcel that it had incurred from the *20 time of the intended closing until the time of the actual closing. [5] See Golden , 244 Ga. at 687-688 (3). Accordingly, we discern no basis for reversal.
Judgment affirmed. Boggs and Branch, JJ., concur .
Notes
[1] The underlying facts are set out in greater detail in the prior appeal of this
case,
Old Peachtree Partners I
,
[2] The settlement documents signed by Old Peachtree and delivered to the County on June 13, 2009 in an effort to carry through with the settlement indicated that the parties contemplated that closing would occur no later than 75 days after the execution of a purchase and sale agreement for the property.
[3] The County also relies heavily on
Hampton Island, LLC v. HAOP, LLC
, 317
Ga. App. 80 (
[4] Relying upon
Grange Mut. Cas. Co. v. Kay
,
[5] The County argues that the Old Peachtree should not be entitled to recover
as incidental damages “increased tax payments resulting from a change in federal law
effective January 1, 2013.” However, the trial court did not rule on this specific issue,
and thus it would be premature for this Court to address it at this time. “[T]his Court
is empaneled to review rulings by lower courts and will not address issues not ruled
upon below.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Messaadi v. Messaadi
, 282 Ga.
126, 129 (3) (
