Evans v. Dunkley

728 S.E.2d 832, 316 Ga. App. 204, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 1950, 2012 WL 2149239, 2012 Ga. App. LEXIS 523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 14, 2012
DocketA12A0074
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 728 S.E.2d 832 (Evans v. Dunkley) 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
Evans v. Dunkley, 728 S.E.2d 832, 316 Ga. App. 204, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 1950, 2012 WL 2149239, 2012 Ga. App. LEXIS 523 (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Andrews, Judge.

This appeal involves a dispute between family members over family-owned farm land located in Brooks County. Clara Evans, Loretta Phelps, and Rosa Diann Ojikutu (three of the six surviving children of Charles and Fannie Phelps, both deceased) filed an action in the Brooks County Superior Court in April 2008 asserting an interest in the subject land acquired under the will of Charles Phelps and from the estate of Fannie Phelps. Named as defendants in the action were other family members with interests in the land: Cora Dunkley, Marilyn Williams, and Fanniella Lewis (the three remaining children of Charles and Fannie Phelps); Josiah Phelps (the brother of Charles Phelps and former executor of his will); Robert Simmons, Jr.; Nathaniel H. Abrams, Jr.; and Albert J. Abrams. In addition to seeking partition of the land along with an accounting and division of funds generated from management of the land, the action sought cancellation of allegedly fraudulent deeds — three executor’s deeds and a deed from Charles Phelps to Robert Simmons, Jr.

This appeal by the Plaintiffs in the action is from the grant of the Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment, and from the denial of the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. In granting the Defendants’ motion and denying the Plaintiffs’ motion, the trial [205]*205court ruled that, with the exception of the Plaintiffs’ claim for partition on which genuine issues of fact remain, the Plaintiffs’ claims were barred by res judicata or by the statute of limitation for fraud. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

The record contains deeds and other allegations purporting to establish that the farm land at issue, comprised of 131 acres more or less, had been owned since the 1950s by Charles W. Phelps, who died in January 1997, and his wife, Fannie W. Phelps, who died in November 1994. At the time of their deaths, Charles and Fannie Phelps were survived by six daughters: Clara Evans, Cora Dunkley, Loretta Phelps, Rosa Ojikutu, Marilyn Williams, and Fanniella Lewis. In January 1993, Charles Phelps deeded a 26-acre tract and a 17-acre tract to his six daughters. In March 1994, Charles Phelps deeded Fannie Phelps a 50% undivided interest in a tract of land containing about 131 acres. Fannie Phelps subsequently died intestate survived by her husband and six daughters, and her estate was never administered. Under the law of descent in effect at the time of Fannie Phelps’s death, she left various undivided interests in the 131 acres to her surviving husband and six daughters. Charles Phelps subsequently died testate owning an interest in the subject land that he acquired by deed or otherwise1 plus the interest left to him by his wife’s estate. Charles Phelps’s will was probated in solemn form in the Brooks County Probate Court, and letters testamentary were issued to his brother, Josiah Phelps, as executor. The will contained three provisions relating to real property: (1) a provision stating that Charles Phelps’s sisters, Cora Wooten and Lena Abrams, and his brother, Josiah Phelps, each be given a ten-acre tract from the larger tract of land deeded to Charles Phelps in 1950 (recorded in Deed Book 68, page 483 of the Clerk of the Brooks County Superior Court) with the location of all three tracts to be determined by the executor; (2) a provision stating that the estate’s real property interests be given in equal parts to Charles Phelps’s six daughters and his grandson, Robert Simmons, Jr.; and (3) a provision stating that Robert Simmons, Jr., shall remain in a house located on the estate’s property “as long as he so desires, rent free.” In October 1997, acting as executor pursuant to the will, Josiah Phelps identified and deeded three separate ten-acre tracts — ten acres to Cora Wooten, ten acres to Lena Abrams, and ten acres to Josiah Phelps. As a result of these three deeds of ten acres each, other land at issue was allegedly left “landlocked” without means of ingress or egress. In August 1998, [206]*206acting as executor pursuant to the will, Josiah Phelps deeded a five-eighths (62.5%) undivided interest in real property to Charles Phelps’s six daughters and to Robert Simmons. The real property described in this deed was the same 131 acres previously described in the March 1994 deed from Charles Phelps to Fannie Phelps, “[l]ess and except the devise to Josiah Phelps, Cora Wooten and Lena P. Abram [sic] often acres each” as provided in the will. In August 1998, again acting as executor of the will, Josiah Phelps deeded Robert Simmons, Jr., an interest in the house located on the subject land pursuant to the terms of the will. Three of the daughters (Dunkley, Williams and Lewis) deeded or otherwise relinquished their interest in the three ten-acre tracts and claim no interest in those tracts. As to the ten-acre tract conveyed to Cora Wooten, she conveyed her interest in this tract to her sister, Lena Abrams, who subsequently died testate holding an interest in two of the ten-acre tracts. Acting as executor of Lena Abrams’s estate, Nathaniel Abrams conveyed these two ten-acre tracts to Albert J. Abrams as trustee of a trust created in Lena Abrams’s will for the benefit of several beneficiaries. In March 1999, the Brooks County Probate Court granted Josiah Phelps’s petition for dismissal and discharge as executor of the estate of Charles Phelps.

The same Plaintiffs (Cora Evans, Loretta Phelps, and Rosa Diann Ojikutu) who filed the present Brooks County Superior Court action in April 2008, filed an action in November 2004 in the Peach County Superior Court against Josiah Phelps, individually and as executor of the estate of Charles Phelps. In the Peach County action, the Plaintiffs alleged that Josiah Phelps had been discharged in 1999 as executor of the estate of Charles Phelps, and sought an accounting: (1) for money he received and expended as executor of the estate of Charles Phelps with respect to the estate’s real and personal property, and (2) for money he subsequently received and expended as an individual (after being discharged as executor) with respect to real and personal property he managed in which the Plaintiffs held an interest. In November 2006, the Peach County Superior Court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the defense ruling that the Plaintiffs’ claims for an accounting for Josiah Phelps’s actions as executor of the estate were barred by his discharge as executor on March 2,1999. As to the claim for an accounting for his actions taken as an individual who managed the property after his discharge, the trial court conducted a bench trial and entered a judgment in September 2007 concluding that, after being discharged as executor, Josiah Phelps contacted the Plaintiffs and all interested heirs about management of the property; that he continued to manage the property at issue on behalf of the Plaintiffs and other interested heirs; [207]*207that he leased the real property; that he made required mortgage payments on the property sometimes using his own money when funds generated by the property were insufficient; and that he ultimately paid off the mortgage in 2006 using settlement proceeds obtained in a class-action discrimination claim filed on behalf of black farmers. The judgment entered in Josiah Phelps’s favor found that he had adequately accounted to the Plaintiffs and other interested heirs for income and expenditures during his management of the jointly held property, and that he had demonstrated “an admirable stewardship of this property.”

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Bluebook (online)
728 S.E.2d 832, 316 Ga. App. 204, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 1950, 2012 WL 2149239, 2012 Ga. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-dunkley-gactapp-2012.