Bickford v. YANCEY DEVELOPMENT CO., INC.

585 S.E.2d 78, 276 Ga. 814, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 2180, 2003 Ga. LEXIS 617
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 11, 2003
DocketS03G0475
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 585 S.E.2d 78 (Bickford v. YANCEY DEVELOPMENT CO., INC.) 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.

Bluebook
Bickford v. YANCEY DEVELOPMENT CO., INC., 585 S.E.2d 78, 276 Ga. 814, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 2180, 2003 Ga. LEXIS 617 (Ga. 2003).

Opinion

Sears, Presiding Justice.

We granted certiorari in order to consider whether OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1), as revised in 1993, automatically renewed restrictive covenants that were established in 1977. For the reasons explained below, we hold that OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1), as revised in 1993, applies only to covenants established after the revised subsection’s effective date, July 1, 1993. Therefore, we affirm.

In 1977, Frank Swift subdivided a 165 acre tract of land he owned in Cobb County into home sites for a residential development. That same year, Swift recorded a plat of the tract which contained a notation restricting the subdivided lots to a minimum size of two acres.

In 2000, appellee Yancey Development Company, Inc. (‘Yancey”), purchased two of the subdivision’s larger lots. Yancey then announced its intention to subdivide the two lots into roughly 80 half-acre parcels and applied to Cobb County for a permit to develop the property as R30, which requires a minimum lot size of 30,000 square feet. Appellants, adjoining property owners, filed suit seeking to enjoin the development and also sought declaratory relief that Yancey is subject to the 1977 covenant restricting lot sizes to no less than two acres.

The trial court granted summary judgment to Yancey and the Court of Appeals affirmed, 1 finding that assuming a valid restrictive covenant was established in 1977, 2 it lapsed as a matter of law after twenty years, in 1997, pursuant to OCGA § 44-5-60 (b). The Court of Appeals also held that although OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) (as amended in 1993) provides for the automatic renewal of restrictive covenants affecting planned subdivisions such as the one at issue here, the statute could not be applied in this case because to do so would result in the retrospective impairment of vested property rights.

1. OCGA § 44-5-60 (b) provides that restrictive covenants shall run for no longer than 20 years. However, effective July 1, 1993, OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) was amended to provide for an automatic 20-year renewal of a covenant in subdivisions containing 15 or more plots, unless 51 percent of the affected owners execute a document expressing their desire that the covenant be terminated.

In Appalachee Enterprises v. Walker, 3 we considered whether the *815 1993 revision to OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) automatically renewed a covenant that was created before 1993, but would not expire until after 1993. In Appalachee, the covenants were sought to be enforced against a purchaser who had acquired the property before 1993. We held that because the owner had purchased the property in reliance upon then-existing law that provided the covenants would not be renewed, the automatic renewal provisions of subsection (d) (1) did not apply to that particular owner. 4

The present appeal also concerns a situation where the covenants were created before 1993 and expired after OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) was revised in 1993. However, unlike Appalachee, in this appeal the covenants are sought to be enforced against an owner who purchased its property after the 1993 revision to subsection (d) (1) became effective and after the covenants had been in existence for over 20 years. Thus, while Appalachee is instructive for purposes of resolving this appeal, it also is distinguishable and non-dispositive. Furthermore, resolution of this appeal requires us to answer a question not fully resolved in Appalachee — whether the 1993 revision to OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) applies to covenants put in place before the revision’s effective date of July 1, 1993.

2. We conclude that the 1993 revision to OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) applies only to covenants established after the revision became effective on July 1, 1993. As our precedent makes clear, a statute generally is not to be applied retroactively unless the statute’s language “imperatively requires it.” 5 A statute does not operate retroactively merely because it might relate to antecedent transactions. To the contrary, before a statute will be applied retroactively, the legislature must clearly state its intention to “ ‘affect transactions which occurred or rights which accrued’ ” before the statute became effective, and to treat those transactions and/or rights differently under the law than they were treated “ ‘at the time of their occurrence.’ ” 6

Over 50 years ago, this Court applied these same general principles when considering the predecessor to OCGA § 44-5-60, and held that the statute lacked any language to indicate that the legislature intended it to be applied retroactively. 7 Since then, though it has been revised several times, no language has been added to the statute to indicate a contrary legislative intent. Certainly, there is nothing in the 1993 revision to subsection (d) (1) that indicates the legis *816 lature intended the automatic renewal provisions to be applied retroactively. Accordingly, based upon long-standing precedent regarding statutory interpretation, we conclude that the automatic renewal provisions of OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (1) do not apply retroactively and apply only to covenants put into place after the revised subsection’s effective date of July 1, 1993. 8

3. We also believe that sound public policy concerns mandate that OCGA § 44-5-60 (d) (l)’s automatic renewal provision be applied only to covenants established after July 1,1993. Appellants urge that the recordation date of a covenant should have no bearing on the application of subsection (d) (l)’s- automatic renewal provision, but rather that the subsection’s application should turn on when a parcel of property was purchased by its owner.

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Bluebook (online)
585 S.E.2d 78, 276 Ga. 814, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 2180, 2003 Ga. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bickford-v-yancey-development-co-inc-ga-2003.