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/
March 26, 2015 In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A14A2108. VEATCH v. AURORA LOAN SERVICES, LLC et al.
B RANCH , Judge.
In a previous action to quiet title, John M. Veatch (“Veatch” or the “Veatch
Estate”), acting as the administrator of his father’s estate, successfully established that
someone had forged two deeds in order to transfer estate property to a person who
used the property to secure a $187,700 loan. The trial court’s decision to quiet title
was affirmed by the Supreme Court.
Aurora Loan Svcs. v. Veatch
,
“Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact
and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Walker v. Gwinnett Hosp.
System
,
The facts, supplemented as shown, are set out in the Supreme Court’s decision affirming the trial court’s order striking the two forged deeds from the Fulton County Records and quieting title to the property in the estate:
Elsie Veatch owned the subject property until her death in 1974; her sole
heir was Raymond Wesley Veatch, Jr., Veatch’s father, who died on
March 20, 2006. After his death, two forged deeds were recorded in the
Fulton County deed records, purporting to convey title to the property
to Antonio Simpson. One forged deed was styled “Quitclaim Deed,”
purportedly executed on May 19, 2006 by Elsie Veatch, who had then
been dead for 32 years; this purported deed was recorded on October 17,
2006. The other purported deed was styled “Executors Deed,” and was
purportedly executed by Raymond Wesley Veatch, Jr., on March 15,
2006, a date on which he lay in a coma; it was recorded on November
6, 2006. After these forged deeds were executed and recorded, a
warranty deed purportedly from Antonio Simpson to Darryl Matthews
was recorded on November 8, 2006. [In May 2007,] Matthews then
executed a security deed in favor of [MERS as the nominee of] First
Magnus Financial Corporation in connection with a loan for $187,500.
[On November 1, 2007, t]he security deed was . . . assigned to Aurora[,
but the assignment was not recorded until April 9, 2009.]
[Meanwhile, o]n September 5, 2007, after Veatch discovered activity on
the property and applied for, and was granted, letters of administration
of the estate of Raymond Wesley Veatch, Jr., he filed in the Fulton
County land records an affidavit stating that the Executor’s and
Quitclaim deeds were false. [On September 18, 2008, h]e then filed in
the superior court [a] petition to quiet title [seeking to cancel the two
forged deeds, the deed to Matthews, and the MERS security deed;
Veatch also filed a lis pendens regarding the subject property]. OCGA
§ 23-3-40 et seq. [Although Aurora initially was not named as a party to
*4
the quiet title action, Aurora was added as a defendant on April 1, 2009;
nine days later, Aurora recorded the assignment of the security deed
from MERS, which was drafted by McCalla.] The trial court appointed
a Special Master who concluded that Aurora was a bona fide purchaser
for value. See
Roop Grocery Co. v. Gentry
,
Aurora Loan Svcs.
,
One year later, Veatch filed suit against Aurora and McCalla alleging slander of title and interference with property rights, seeking damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees and expenses. Veatch alleged that as a result of the defendants’ actions, Veatch was unable to convey clear title to the property from 2007 through when the Supreme Court affirmed the decision to quiet title and that the defendants therefore should be liable for the loss in value of the property during that time. Veatch moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of liability, and the defendants moved for *5 summary judgment on all of Veatch’s claims. In December 2013, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Aurora and McCalla. Veatch now appeals.
1. Veatch contends the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to Aurora and McCalla on his claim of slander of title. [1] Veatch raised the claim of slander of title as follows:
By recording the Aurora Assignment on the Fulton County Records, then consciously acting to maintain the existence of the invalid encumbrance on the Fulton County Records, Defendants knowingly and voluntarily published false and defamatory words against the Veatch Estate’s title to the Veatch Property.
Veatch further alleged that as a result, the estate could not convey clear title to the subject property, or even attempt to sell it, until after the Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s decision to quiet title. Veatch claimed that as a result, the estate suffered special damages “by the loss in value of the slandered Veatch Property.”
“The owner of any estate in lands may bring an action for libelous or
slanderous words which falsely and maliciously impugn his title if any damage
accrues to him therefrom.” OCGA § 51-9-11. “In order to sustain an action of this
*6
kind, the plaintiff must allege and prove the uttering and publishing of the slanderous
words; that they were false; that they were malicious; that he sustained special
damage thereby; and that he possessed an estate in the property slandered.”
Latson
v. Boaz
,
Pretermitting analysis of the other elements of proof, this case is controlled by
Veatch’s failure to raise an issue of fact regarding special damages. A plaintiff
asserting a slander of title claim is entitled to “only such special damages as he
actually sustained as a consequence of the wrongful acts, which damages must be
pled and proven with particularity.”
Sanders v. Brown
,
In their motions for summary judgment, the appellees claimed that there was no evidence of special damages to support Veatch’s claim. In response, Veatch points to his verified answers to interrogatories in which he made the following assertions of damage resulting from the alleged slander of title: (1) the estate was unable to take action to sell the property before March 18, 2011, the date of the Supreme Court’s decision in the quiet title action; (2) beginning in June 2011, the estate took steps to sell the property and received two offers before entering into an agreement to sell on August 29, 2011 for a price of $18,000; (3) the price obtained was “consistent with other nearby listings”; and (4) Veatch accepted that price based on an evaluation of the depressed market conditions and the unlikelihood that conditions would improve in the “foreseeable future.” In his briefs, Veatch suggests that the estate was damaged by the difference in the amount of the 2007 loan, $187,700, that was obtained based on the forged deeds, and the ultimate price that Veatch was able to obtain for the property in 2011, $18,000. This evidence is insufficient to raise an issue of fact regarding special damages.
First, a claim of slander of title “accrues when the false, slanderous, and
malicious words impugning the title of the person’s land are first published, causing
special damages.”
Sanders
,
Veatch’s assertion that he was damaged by having to litigate the quiet title
action is also without merit. Costs of litigation and attorney fees “do not constitute
the special damages necessary to support [a claim of slander of title.]”
Sanders
, 257
Ga. App. at 568 (citation omitted);
M & M Mtg.
,
Because Veatch failed to present any evidence of special damages in response to the motions for summary judgment, the trial court correctly granted summary judgment on Veatch’s claim of slander of title.
2. Because Veatch’s claims for punitive damages and attorney fees are
derivative of his claim for slander of title, the trial court also did not err by granting
summary judgment on those claims. See
Green v. Flanagan
,
Judgment affirmed. Barnes, P. J., and Boggs, J., concur .
Notes
[1] Veatch does not challenge the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on Veatch’s claim of interference with property, and therefore that claim is not before us.
