Arco design/build, LLC v. Savannah Green I Owner, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 21, 2022
DocketA22A0056
StatusPublished

This text of Arco design/build, LLC v. Savannah Green I Owner, LLC (Arco design/build, LLC v. Savannah Green I Owner, LLC) 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
Arco design/build, LLC v. Savannah Green I Owner, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, P. J., MERCIER and MARKLE, 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. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 21, 2022

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A22A0056. ARCO DESIGN/BUILD, LLC v. SAVANNAH GREEN I OWNER, LLC.

MARKLE, Judge.

This appeal addresses the discrete issue of whether the tolling provisions of the

2020 Statewide Judicial Emergency Orders extended the deadline for filing an

affidavit of nonpayment under Georgia’s lien waiver statute, OCGA § 44-14-366.1

The trial court determined that they did not and, for the reasons that follow, we

affirm.

The material facts of this case are not in dispute. In 2018, Savannah Green I

Owner, LLC (“SGO”) entered into a contract with Arco Design/Build, LLC, under

which Arco agreed to design and build a warehouse on SGO’s property in Pooler,

1 Unless otherwise noted, all references to OCGA § 44-14-366 are to the version that became effective on March 31, 2009. Georgia. The contract required Arco to submit periodic applications for payment, and

to execute conditional lien waivers to cover the exact amount requested in the

payment application. Pursuant to the terms of these waivers, Arco released “any and

all liens or claims of lien it has upon the . . . property” upon full payment of the

requested amount. Tracking the language of OCGA § 44-14-366 (f) (2), the waivers

also provided that Arco “shall be conclusively deemed to have been paid in full”

regardless of whether Arco actually received the payment, unless it filed an affidavit

of nonpayment or a claim of lien within 60 days of the date of the waiver.

On April 22, 2020, Arco submitted to SGO an application for payment in the

amount of $1,027,695.17, and executed the accompanying lien waiver. More than 60

days later, on September 14, 2020, Arco filed an affidavit of nonpayment under

OCGA § 44-14-366 in Chatham County Superior Court, claiming that it was still

owed $668,912.17 under this application for payment.2 The following month, Arco

recorded a claim of lien for the unpaid amount.

SGO filed suit, bringing a claim for breach of contract based on Arco’s

allegedly defective work, and sought a declaratory judgment that Arco’s affidavit of

2 On that same date, Arco filed an additional affidavit of nonpayment in the amount of $184,264.03, but that claim was not addressed in the trial court’s order on appeal.

2 nonpayment was untimely, and therefore any debt SGO owed was extinguished by

operation of law. Arco answered and brought counterclaims for breach of contract

based on SGO’s nonpayment and to foreclose its lien.3 In its pleadings, Arco asserted

that its affidavit of nonpayment was timely because the 60-day deadline under OCGA

§ 44-14-366 (f) (2) (c) was tolled, and did not begin to run until July 14, 2020, under

the Supreme Court of Georgia’s Order Declaring Statewide Judicial Emergency, and

the subsequent orders extending the judicial emergency. SGO moved for partial

summary judgment on this issue, which the trial court granted in a thorough and well-

reasoned order. Arco now appeals.

Arco challenges the trial court’s determination that its affidavit of nonpayment

was untimely because the Emergency Orders did not toll the filing requirements under

OCGA § 44-14-366. This appeal requires us to construe the applicable Emergency

3 The Georgia State-wide Business Court granted the parties’ joint motion to transfer the case from the superior court. This appeal is the first review of an order of the state business court. We have jurisdiction to consider this appeal pursuant to OCGA §§ 5-6-33 (a) (1) and 15-3-3.1 (a), and under Article VI, Section V, Paragraph III of the Georgia Constitution.

3 Orders,4 as well as the Georgia lien waiver statute, and we are bound by the following

rules of construction:

In interpreting any statute, we necessarily begin our analysis with familiar and binding canons of construction. And in considering the meaning of a statute, our charge is to presume that the General Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant. So, we must afford the statutory text its plain and ordinary meaning, consider the text contextually, read the text in its most natural and reasonable way, as an ordinary speaker of the English language would, and seek to avoid a construction that makes some language mere surplusage. Thus, when the language of a statute is plain and susceptible of only one natural and reasonable construction, courts must construe the statute accordingly.

(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Kemron Environmental Servs. v. Prospira

Paincare, 362 Ga. App. 727, 730 (870 SE2d 53) (2022). Because statutory

interpretation is a question of law, our review is de novo. Hill v. First Atlantic Bank,

323 Ga. App. 731, 732 (747 SE2d 892) (2013). And, as lien statutes are in derogation

4 The parties do not dispute that the rules of construction apply to the Emergency Orders as the Chief Justice’s authority to issue them is derived from statute. See OCGA § 38-3-60 et seq.; cf. Schwartz v. Black, 200 Ga. App. 735, 736 (409 SE2d 681) (1991) (where administrative agency’s authority to adopt rules and regulations is derived from statute, rules of statutory interpretation apply to their construction).

4 of the common law, they “must be strictly construed in favor of the property owner

and against the materialman.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Bibler Masonry

Contractors v. J. T. Turner Constr. Co., 340 Ga. App. 490, 493 (798 SE2d 19)

(2017).

Under the lien waiver statute, OCGA § 44-14-366:

(1) When a waiver and release provided for in this Code section is executed by the claimant, it shall be binding against the claimant for all purposes, subject only to payment in full of the amount set forth in the waiver and release.

(2) Such amounts shall conclusively be deemed paid in full upon the earliest to occur of:

(A) Actual receipt of funds;

(B) Execution by the claimant of a separate written acknowledgment of payment in full; or

(C) Sixty days after the date of the execution of the waiver and release, unless prior to the expiration of said 60 day period the claimant files a claim of lien or files in the county in which the property is located an affidavit of nonpayment.

OCGA § 44-14-366 (f) (1), (2).

5 On March 14, 2020, in response to the surging COVID-19 pandemic, Chief

Justice Harold D. Melton issued the first of several Emergency Orders, declaring a

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