AgSouth Farm Credit, ACA v. Del-A-Rae, Inc. (In Re Del-A-Rae, Inc.)

447 B.R. 915, 2011 WL 1481722
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 29, 2011
Docket19-50072
StatusPublished

This text of 447 B.R. 915 (AgSouth Farm Credit, ACA v. Del-A-Rae, Inc. (In Re Del-A-Rae, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AgSouth Farm Credit, ACA v. Del-A-Rae, Inc. (In Re Del-A-Rae, Inc.), 447 B.R. 915, 2011 WL 1481722 (Ga. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM STAY

LAMAR W. DAVIS, JR., Bankruptcy Judge.

Debtor’s case was filed on October 5, 2009. AgSouth Farm Credit, ACA (“Ag-South”) filed a Motion for Relief from Stay on November 10, 2009. A hearing was conducted on January 19, 2010, after which I entered an Order denying that Motion on an interim basis and provided for a final hearing to be conducted at a later time. AgSouth Farm Credit, ACA v. Del-A-Rae, Inc., 448 B.R. 592 (Bankr.S.D.Ga.2010). When that Order was entered Debtor contended that the property which secured AgSouth’s note (the “Property”), was worth $8.8 million based on an appraisal by Gussie Nease — substantially more than the $4.66 million concluded by AgSouth’s appraiser, William F. Dean. Steve Collins, Debtor’s owner, actually believed the property to be worth even more than $8.8 million based on overtures he received from the Georgia Ports Authority and from the federal government acting through the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (“the FWS”) on behalf of the Savannah National Wildlife Refuge.

Final trial of this matter was delayed several times because the FWS had commissioned an appraisal of the property for its own use and Debtor believed that the appraisal would support Debtor’s concluded value. Ultimately, that appraisal — by Neill F. McDonald — was provided to the FWS, to the Movant, and to the Debtor. This Court scheduled a hearing for March 14, 2011. Based on the evidence and applicable authorities I make the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

By stipulation of the parties, all the evidence received during the first hearing on this Motion on November 10, 2009, is incorporated fully into the record of this proceeding. Supplemental evidence was taken and that evidence reveals the following:

Mr. McDonald’s appraisal of the property concluded a fair market value of $2.035 million for the Property. 1 The Property was described in this Court’s prior Order as:

654 acres more or less in Effingham County, Georgia, consisting of approximately 199 acres of upland property and 456 acres of delineated wetlands. Both the upland and wetland portions of the tract contain substantial merchantable and premerchantable timber, both pine and hardwood. The tract lies with frontage along Abercorn Road and Old Augusta Road in southeast Effingham County and is bordered generally on the east or southeastern side of the tract by Abercorn Creek, a major tributary of the Savannah River. The creek frontage extends a distance of approximately 9500 feet. However, the upland portion of the tract, except at the southernmost *917 extremity, is separated from the creek by delineated wetland areas averaging approximately 1500 feet across, although that distance varies substantially.

AgSouth v. Del-A-Rae, Inc., 448 B.R. 592, 592-93 (Bankr.S.D.Ga.2010). Mr. McDonald assumed the highest and best use of the property would be for a buyer to sell most of the timber located in the “swamp wetlands” portion of the tract and hold the upland portions for future development as a residential tract. He found the market for residential real estate in Effingham County to be extremely poor with a backlog of inventory of approximately 3,750 homesites — with infrastructure already in place — awaiting sale. Peak sales of real estate in Effingham County at the height of the real estate boom reached approximately 600 new homes per year and the current sales volume, both residential and non-residential, is far lower than that. Because the tract of land is unique in its location and close proximity to Abercorn Creek, and because of excellent road access and proximity to Savannah, Mr. McDonald concluded that the swampland was worth $1,500.00 per acre and that the 273 acres of uplands 2 were worth $720,000.00. He accepted the gross timber value of the FWS’s independent expert, but reduced it to a net of $939,000.00 after taking into account costs of harvesting the timber. The result was a total value for the tract of $2.035 million. McDonald and other experts concede that the comparisons from which they make their valuation determinations are not perfect, but are the best available in the current market.

Mr. Dean had previously testified on behalf of AgSouth and concluded a value of $4.66 million. 3 Dean’s updated valuation found no more recent sales of comparable property and found the market to be worse than it was at the time of his testimony. However, he reviewed some listings of comparable property which showed a range of $8,500.00 to $12,000.00 per acre for non-wetland timberlands in Effingham County, Georgia. From that he concluded a valuation of 210 acres of upland, non-wetland property at $10,000.00 per acre, for a total of $2.1 million. He believes the timber value of the tract, which he had originally set at $715,000.00, has now increased in value to $799,000.00. He also valued the 440 acres of swampland at $1,500.00 per acre, for a value of $666,000.00. Dean therefore estimated a total updated value of $3.566 million.

Ms. Nease did not perform an update to her previous appraisal, but Debtor relies on her previous appraisal in conjunction with the timber cruise of David Johns. That appraisal totaled $8.8 million, as reflected in my previous order.

I am persuaded that Mr. Dean’s and Mr. McDonald’s valuations are much closer to the true value of the Property than the value concluded by Ms. Nease. However, I am compelled to observe today — as I observed in my previous order — that Ms. Nease included a 25% increase in the per acre value of the subject property due to its unique characteristics and location along Abercorn Creek near the Savannah River. This location is near the Georgia Ports Authority, near the FWS Refuge, and near the employment centers of west Chatham County.

Neither Mr. Dean nor Mr. McDonald applied any upward adjustment based on those factors. In this uncertain real estate *918 market I understand why an appraiser would be uneasy about making another upward adjustment to the per acre value which was revealed through a comparable sales analysis. However, I continue to agree with Debtor that there is something intrinsically different and special about this real estate. The bottom line is uncon-tradicted that this is the only real estate between downtown Savannah and Interstate 95 along the Savannah River which has privately owned upland access to deep-water over existing developed roads. That fact must add some value, and I believe that the market will ultimately reflect that belief, but it simply cannot be demonstrated to exist today based on current comparable sales. Still, it is not necessary for me to arrive at a specific value of this property any more today than it was on March 8, 2010. It is simply necessary for me to determine whether there is equity in the real estate.

It is stipulated that at the time this case was filed Debtor owed AgSouth $4,755,696.47. Adding interest at the non-default contract rate to that amount through the date of the hearing, the total debt is $5,330,122.18 with per diem interest accruing at $985.18.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Untitled Case
E.D. Wisconsin, 2026

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 B.R. 915, 2011 WL 1481722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agsouth-farm-credit-aca-v-del-a-rae-inc-in-re-del-a-rae-inc-gasb-2011.