WILLIS v. CHEELEY
A21A1730
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
March 15, 2022
PIPKIN, Judge.
SECOND DIVISION; BARNES P. J., GOBEIL and PIPKIN, JJ.
PIPKIN, Judge.
Appellee Joseph E. Cheeley, III, as executor of the estate of Joseph Elbert Cheeley, Jr., brought a declaratory judgment action against Appellant William Joseph Willis, as executor of the estate of Dorothy Cheeley Willis, seeking guidance regarding the delivery of a deed.1 Appellant Willis now appeals the trial court‘s entry of judgment in Appellee Cheeley‘s favor, challenging, among other things, the trial court‘s jurisdiction to render a declaratory judgment in this case. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the declaratory judgment for Appellee Cheeley and remand for the trial court to dismiss this nonjusticiable action.
The Grantor died in October 2013, and Appellee Cheeley and the Grantee were named co-executors of his estate. In the years since the Grantor‘s death, at least three legal actions have been filed in relation to the Property, including the one giving rise to this appeal. First, in January 2017, Appellee Cheeley, acting as co-executor of the Grantor‘s estate, filed a petition to quiet title and for declaratory judgment against the Grantee in her personal capacity (the “2017 superior court action“). The petition alleged that the Grantee claimed a life estate in the Property and sought to quiet title on the ground that the Deed was not delivered. The Grantee died in July 2017, before the case was resolved, and the case was dismissed without prejudice.
Meanwhile, Appellee Cheeley initiated the instant declaratory action in the Superior Court of Gwinnett County, again raising the issue of the Deed‘s delivery. The trial court ultimately entered summary judgment in his favor, finding that the Deed was not delivered, and this appeal followed.
In the case at hand, Appellee Cheeley alleged in his complaint that an “actual controversy” arose between the parties “regarding the rights and legal relation of the [P]roperty regarding the delivery of the [Deed].” The complaint, however, is silent as to what the “actual controversy” is. In fact, the complaint does not offer any indication as to why the Deed‘s delivery is of consequence or identify any future conduct upon which resolution of the delivery issue depends given that Appellee Cheeley is in possession of the Property, the Grantee is deceased, and the parties apparently agree that the Deed conveyed, if anything, a life estate that terminated at the Grantee‘s death.
Nor do Appellee Cheeley‘s conclusory arguments on appeal, unsupported by citation to the record, add clarity to what the “actual controversy” might be. Though Appellee Cheeley asserts that declaratory judgment is proper because he faces uncertainty in the distribution of the Grantor‘s estate - specifically, whether he may “distribute the estate without consideration of the Willis-Estate-creditor‘s claim” - he does not explain, and we do not discern, what the “Willis-Estate-creditor‘s claim”
2. In light of our holding in Division 1, we decline to reach Appellant Willis‘s remaining enumerated errors.
Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction. Barnes, P. J., and Gobeil, J., concur.
