Atlanta-East, Inc. v. Laird
This text of 501 S.E.2d 202 (Atlanta-East, Inc. v. Laird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This appeal is brought from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the appellees Laird and Scott (collectively “Laird”) and against the appellant Atlanta-East, Inc. The underlying dispute concerns Atlanta-East’s suit seeking a declaratory judgment that it holds title to an undivided one-fourth interest in a 160-acre parcel of property located in Gilmer County (“the Property”). Atlanta-East claims its interest in the Property is established by a chain of title going back more than 50 years.1 Laird disputes that contention, and argues that the chain of title establishes that he owns full fee simple title in the entire Property. We conclude that the chain of title, while not a model of clarity, supports the trial court’s conclusion that Laird’s title to the Property is superior to Atlanta-East’s. Therefore, we affirm.
The following undisputed facts are evident from the parties’ respective summary judgment motions: In 1917, an undivided one-fourth interest in the Property was deeded to McCorkle, a former governor of West Virginia. When he died in 1930, McCorkle devised his interest in the Property to his daughter-in-law, Margaret McCor-kle. In 1942, Margaret McCorkle deeded her undivided one-fourth interest in the Property, together with other property, by deed of trust to the Charleston National Bank, as Trustee (“the Bank”). The deed stated that Ms. McCorkle owned certain real estate jointly with Porter, whose estate was being administered by the Bank, and that such real estate could be more advantageously “handled, sold or leased . . . as a whole.” Ms. McCorkle’s deed of trust specifically provided that all future purchasers of the Property would be protected in their dealings with the Bank as trustee, “as if the [Bank] were the sole and absolute owner of [Margaret McCorkle’s] interest in [the Property] in fee simple.” When Margaret McCorkle died in 1958, she devised all of her real property to her son, Sam McCorkle. However, at that time, any interest that she formerly had in the Property remained vested in the Bank as trustee under the 1942 deed.
In April 1983, the Bank, acting as the trustee of the Porter [666]*666estate, deeded the Property to the Burnt Mountain Company. The deed purports to convey not just an undivided one-fourth interest, but full title to the 160 acres. In June 1983, the Burnt Mountain Company deeded the entire 160 acres in fee simple to Laird. That deed was recorded in Gilmer and Pickens Counties in July 1983. Since 1983, Laird has conveyed the Property as security for a loan, paid the resulting indebtedness, paid all taxes due on the Property, surveyed the Property, and divided it into lots.
In June 1991, the Bank, acting as trustee of the McCorkle trust, executed a deed to John and Gwendolyn McCorkle, Sam McCorkle’s heirs, that purported to convey an undivided one-fourth interest in the Property to John and Gwendolyn. In August 1991, John and Gwendolyn deeded their purported undivided one-fourth interest in the Property to appellant Atlanta-East, Inc. In April 1996, Atlanta-East filed the underlying action seeking a judgment declaring that it owns an undivided one-fourth interest in the Property, descending in a chain of title under the 1942 McCorkle deed to the Bank. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court ruled that Laird owns the Property in its entirety, free from any claims of Atlanta-East. Atlanta-East then filed this appeal.
In construing a trust instrument, it is a court’s duty to determine the settlor’s intention and to effectuate it insofar as the language used in the trust instrument and the rules of law will permit.2 Trusts generally are executory in nature, and unless otherwise provided, a trust’s corpus shall remain with its trustee so long as the trustee has powers or duties with regard to the corpus, and so long as the trust continues to serve a material purpose of the settlor.3
Bearing these principles in mind, we look to the following terms from Margaret McCorkle’s deed of trust instrument, created by her in 1942:
Whereas [McCorkle] and the Estate of . . . Porter are the owners of certain real estate hereinafter described, situated in Gordon, Gilmer and Pickens Counties, Georgia, and . . . the [Bank] is one of the administrators of the Estate of. . . Porter, and ... is handling and endeavoring to sell or lease the undivided interest of said Estate in and to said real estate, and it is believed that said property can be handled, sold or leased more advantageously as a whole . . . [McCor-kle] doth grant, bargain, sell, release, and forever quitclaim unto the [Bank], all of the right, title, interest, claim or demand [she has] in all real estate situate [sic] in Gordon, [667]*667Pickens, and Gilmer Counties, Georgia. . . . Said lands shall include [the Property]. ... To have and to hold ... in trust. . . with the following powers, rights, duties, and obligations ... (4) to make sale and conveyance of [the Property] or any part thereof. . . .
* * * *
It is expressly provided that there shall be no duty or responsibility on the part of any purchaser ... [of the Property] to make inquiry as to the nature of the trust under which it is held by the [Bank], and . . . any purchaser . . ., shall be protected in dealing with [the Bank] in all respects as if the . . . Bank, as Trustee, were the sole and absolute owner of [McCorkle’s] interest in said real estate in fee simple.4
From this language, it is clear that Margaret McCorkle’s intent in creating the 1942 deed of trust was to vest the Bank as trustee with absolute title to her one-fourth interest in the Property, and to authorize the Bank to sell that one-fourth interest. As recognized in the deed of trust, the Bank already was handling the disposition of property held by the Porter estate. By the plain terms of her deed of trust, it is obvious that Ms. McCorkle intended that some of her property holdings, including her undivided one-fourth interest in the Property, could best be sold together with property held by the Porter estate.
While there is some discrepancy on this issue, evidence of record states that the remaining undivided three-fourths interest in the Property was held by the Bank as trustee of the Porter estate. The June 1991 deed from the Bank to John and Gwendolyn McCorkle states that Margaret McCorkle’s conveyance to the Bank of her interest in the Property was “made as a convenience to the Estate of. . . Porter, which owned the remaining 3/4ths undivided interest” in the Property.5 That the Bank as trustee of the Porter estate exercised some control over the remaining undivided three-fourths interest in the Property also can be inferred from the plain terms of Margaret [668]*668McCorkle’s 1942 deed, and also is essentially conceded by Atlanta-East in its brief to this Court. Thus, it can be concluded from the record that, by deeding her interest in the Property to the Bank in trust, Margaret McCorkle intended that the Bank as trustee be granted authority to “make sale and conveyance of” the entire Property.
It also is clear from the 1942 deed that Margaret McCorkle intended to shield purchasers of her undivided one-fourth interest in the Property from claims that the Bank was without authority to sell that interest. Insofar as such allegations might be raised, Ms.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
501 S.E.2d 202, 269 Ga. 665, 98 Fulton County D. Rep. 1857, 1998 Ga. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-east-inc-v-laird-ga-1998.