Alr Oglethorpe v. C. Gerald Henderson

783 S.E.2d 187, 336 Ga. App. 739, 2016 Ga. App. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 23, 2016
DocketA15A2336
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 783 S.E.2d 187 (Alr Oglethorpe v. C. Gerald Henderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alr Oglethorpe v. C. Gerald Henderson, 783 S.E.2d 187, 336 Ga. App. 739, 2016 Ga. App. LEXIS 184 (Ga. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

This suit arose after ALR Oglethorpe, LLC, bought two parcels of land and then discovered after the closing that one of the parcels was still burdened by a recorded access easement. ALR and five individuals who had invested in related limited liability companies 1 (collectively, ALR) sued C. Gerald Henderson, Title Resources Corp. - Savannah, and Title Resources Corporation (collectively, Henderson) for professional negligence in preparing the title examination and abstract. The trial court granted Henderson’s motion to dismiss, finding that the statute of limitation had run before suit was filed and also finding that the suit was barred by the doctrine of res judicata. ALR appeals, and because we agree that the suit was barred by the doctrine of collateral estoppel, we affirm.

The parties do not dispute the underlying facts pertinent to this appeal. ALR retained the law firm Coleman Talley LLP to perform a title search on two contiguous tracts of land along the south bank of the Savannah River for a development project known as the Savannah River Landing. Coleman Talley asked Fidelity National Insurance Company to prepare a title commitment for the properties, and Fidelity hired an attorney, R. E. Hodges, to prepare a title abstract. Hodges then hired Henderson, whose abstract revealed the existence of an access easement across one of the tracts but failed to identify all of the parties benefitted by the easement across the tract.

Fidelity listed the access easement on a schedule of exceptions included with the title commitment, and Coleman Talley drafted an agreement to terminate the easements signed only by the benefitted parties who were identified in the title abstract. Fidelity then removed the exception to the title commitment, and the property sales closed in May 2006.

In fall 2007, the individual investors loaned $4.2 million to Oglethorpe Landings Holdings, LLC, which was ALR’s sole member. The money was intended to be a short-term bridge loan for development costs until other financing could be arranged. But when ALR presented a proposed subdivision plat to the Savannah Metropolitan Planning Commission, a contiguous property owner objected because the proposed plat provided no means of access to that owner’s property, which was still benefitted by a recorded easement over property now owned by ALR. As ALR said in its complaint, the *740 still-existing “easement rights prohibited the approval of the subdivision map, and therefore brought the entire Savannah River Landings project to a halt.” Lacking an approved subdivision plat, ALR had difficulty marketing the project.

ALR alleged in its complaint that the individual investors learned of the easement issue in January 2008. The title insurance company, Fidelity, negotiated the termination of the remaining easement rights, which were relinquished in June 2008. The Savannah River Landing project ultimately failed, and multiple suits against various parties were filed, transferred, dismissed and reinstated. Some of the suits overlapped, with claims against some defendants proceeding in two courts simultaneously.

For example, in September 2009 in the State Court of Chatham County, ALR sued Coleman Talley for malpractice and sued the property sellers for failing to disclose the outstanding easement. The sellers filed a third-party complaint against the title insurance company, which filed and then dismissed a fourth-party complaint against R. E. Hodges, Jr., LLC, the company it hired to prepare the title abstract. ALR filed its own complaint against Hodges as a fourth-party defendant, and Hodges was served on November 16, 2010.

Hodges moved to dismiss ALR’s claim against him, arguing that he had performed the title abstract before March 2006, and therefore the four-year statute of limitation had expired at least by March 2010. On January 24, 2012, the Chatham County court granted Hodges’ motion to dismiss, holding that the statute of limitation had expired before Hodges was sued.

The Chatham County court subsequently granted summary judgment to the property sellers in October 2012, who were the only defendants residing in Chatham County, and the case was transferred to the State Court of Fulton County, one of Coleman Talley’s counties of residence. 2 ALR appealed the grant of summary judgment to the property sellers, and this court affirmed that judgment without opinion in ALR Oglethorpe v. Peeples, 334 Ga. App. XXIII (Case No. A15A1358) (November 20, 2015) (unpublished).

Meanwhile, on January 6, 2012, ALR filed another suit in Chatham County against Coleman Talley and Henderson, which is before us in this appeal. ALR attached expert affidavits to its complaint, averring that the law firm had ethical conflicts related to its *741 representation of the individual plaintiffs and that all of the defendants had breached the applicable standard of care in failing to discover and disclose the easement that still burdened the property after ALR bought it. ALR alleged that it lost potential sales as a result of its failure to gain the city’s approval of its development plan due to the then-existing easement rights burdening one of the two tracts.

As previously mentioned, Henderson moved to dismiss the claims against him, arguing that the four-year statute of limitation began to run on the claim when the title examination was completed, which was at the latest March 2006. Therefore, under any set of facts as pled, he asserted, the suit filed in January 2012 was time-barred. He also argued that the allegations against him were res judicata based on the previous Chatham County case alleging malpractice against Hodges based on the same title examination and abstract as the current case.

In February 2015, ALR filed a motion seeking permission to add itself as an additional plaintiff in its capacity as Coleman Talley’s assignee. ALR represented that it had settled its claims against Coleman Talley in September 2014 and had taken an assignment of the firm’s claims against Henderson. Henderson subsequently consented to the motion to add ALR in its capacity as assignee of Coleman Talley’s claims.

In June 2015, the trial court issued the order now on appeal, granting Henderson’s motion to dismiss the initial claims of ALR, although not dismissing ALR’s claims against Henderson in its capacity “as assignees of Coleman Talley, LLP, and its insurer,” which were hot the subject of the motion to dismiss. The trial court found that the suit involved a title examination that took place at least by March 20, 2006, when Coleman Talley prepared an agreement terminating the easement rights of the benefitted parties listed in the title abstract, that the applicable statute of limitation was four years, and that the statute of limitation expired no later than March 20, 2010, long before this suit was filed. The court also found that the claims against Henderson were barred by the doctrine of res judicata, based on the previous suit against the property sellers and the adjudication on the merits of ALR’s claims against Hodges.

1. ALR asserts on appeal that the trial court erred in granting Henderson’s motion to dismiss based on the doctrine of res judicata.

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Bluebook (online)
783 S.E.2d 187, 336 Ga. App. 739, 2016 Ga. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alr-oglethorpe-v-c-gerald-henderson-gactapp-2016.