In January 2016, the Superior Court of Chatham County granted a petition for an interlocutory injunction, pursuant to which it removed Leonard McCoy as President of the Board of Directors of the Willow Lakes Plantation Homeowners Association. McCoy and the Association appeal, but upon our review of the record and briefs, we see no error and
The Association was created to manage Willow Lakes Plantation, which is a residential development near Savannah. The Board, which consists of five members, is elected by the homeowner-members of the Association, and McCoy was elected as the President of the Board in 2011 (and he has been reelected several times since then). In 2012, Joyce Bovee and several other homeowner-members of the Association filed a complaint alleging that McCoy and the Board were mismanaging the Association and that McCoy had converted Association funds to his own use. After a hearing, the trial court appointed Hamrick Gnann as receiver to monitor the Association and control its finances. Gnann later reported that he was encountering difficulties with McCoy.
In 2015, a petition was filed to enjoin the Board — and particularly McCoy — from exercising any management authority over the Association. According to the petition, McCoy and the Board had undermined Gnann’s authority, and their actions led to the resignation of the property management company that Gnann had hired (and made it difficult for him to identify any company willing to manage the property). In response, McCoy filed a motion to recuse and a motion to dismiss. The trial court denied the motion to recuse in June 2015.
1. McCoy claims that the trial court erred when it removed him as President of the Board, asserting that the evidence presented to the trial court did not show that he had acted improperly. But we must defer to the trial court’s credibility determinations, weighing of the evidence, and resolution of disputed factual issues. See Danforth v. Apple Inc.,
2. McCoy’s other claims of error — that Gnann should have filed a motion to intervene under OCGA § 9-8-5 and that the trial court should not have appointed Gnann because a majority of the homeowner-members of the Association opposed the appointment — are without merit and do not warrant discussion.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Because McCoy complains about the propriety of the equitable relief awarded by the trial court and because he filed his notice of appeal in 2016, this case falls within the appellate jurisdiction of this Court. See Danforth v. Apple Inc.,
McCoy claims that the trial court should have granted his motion to recuse based on the fact that Gnann also served as a judge pro tem of the trial court. But the motion to recuse was not filed for more than two years after the relationship between the trial court and Gnann was known to McCoy, and in any event, the motion to recuse did not allege this relationship as a reason for recusal. Indeed, McCoy did not raise the relationship until after the trial court had denied his motion to recuse. As a result, we cannot find error in the trial court’s denial of the motion to recuse. See GeorgiaCarry.Org, Inc. v. James,
McCoy argues that the trial court erred when it denied his motion to dismiss because the petition to enjoin incorrectly referred (in one instance) to the other four members of the Board as “[respondents.” But as found by the trial court, it is clear that the petition was filed against McCoy and the Association, and the other members of the Board were referenced in the petition only in their official capacities.
In a supplemental brief, McCoy alleges that the trial court should not have removed him as President of the Board because fewer than 10 percent of the members of the Association sought his removal. (According to the facts alleged in his supplemental brief, the number of members seeking his removal was, at most, 9.9 percent of the total number of Association members). See OCGA § 14-3-810 (a). But McCoy has not shown that he raised this argument before the trial court, and he has not preserved this claim for appellate review. See Cohran v. Carlin,
