Kingston Development Co. v. Kenerly

208 S.E.2d 118, 132 Ga. App. 346, 1974 Ga. App. LEXIS 1688
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 18, 1974
Docket49006
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 208 S.E.2d 118 (Kingston Development Co. v. Kenerly) 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
Kingston Development Co. v. Kenerly, 208 S.E.2d 118, 132 Ga. App. 346, 1974 Ga. App. LEXIS 1688 (Ga. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Clark, Judge.

"Career case” is a term used by lawyers to describe litigation which contains complex claims and lengthy legalities to the extent that extraordinary amounts of time and effort are necessarily required of the advocates in representing their clients. Such appellation applies to the instant situation. Consider merely numbers: there were three plaintiffs, two defendants, one rejected intervenor, and eight attorneys officially listed as representing these six parties. The result is an appellate record of 176 pages with an index thereto of 71 entries and a nine-volume trial transcript totaling 1,668 pages covering testimony of 19 witnesses and more than 70 documentary exhibits. In behalf of their clients the able attorneys have furnished this court with nine excellent briefs. Additionally, in fulfillment of their advocacy of their clients’ cause, they have referred us to the record and extensive briefs in another case involving some similarities recently ruled upon by a different division of our court.

Personal prefatory pensive ponderings, 1 such as the foregoing, recognizably play partial part in this court’s eventual decision. Yet when an opinion is limited in length when compared to such a numerical situation, the parties and their advocates who have put so much into their cause may not realize that the participants on the bench have likewise devoted much worry, study, and toil, towards our goal of making certain that our judicial *347 decision represents the correct legal determination.

The instant brouhaha stems from a suit seeking commissions of $210,000 filed by two licensed real estate brokers, Brannan, Marriott & Turner, Inc. ("BM&T”) and Daniel B. Kenerly d/b/a Kenerly Realty Co., against Kingston Development Co. ("Kingston”). The claim was based upon an agreement allegedly made by defendant to pay a fee of 10% to plaintiffs by virtue of their having performed their contract to obtain a purchaser for a tract of land in Gwinnett County owned by defendant company. An intervenor plaintiff, Alvin Ashley, and a co-defendant, the Presidential Realty Corporation ("Presidential”), were added by consent. An application for intervention as a plaintiff by Linda Poland, an agent of Kenerly, was denied. Instead of the transaction between Kingston and Presidential being consummated by the usual deed of conveyance from seller to buyer transferring the property which was Kingston’s principal asset, the two corporations worked out a stock swap for tax purposes. Thereby all of Kingston’s stock was exchanged by Presidential for Presidential’s issuance of specified amounts of its restricted stock to the six individuals who constituted Kingston’s sole stockholders. The result was that Kingston became a subsidiary of Presidential. There is no contention here that this method was adopted as a device to avoid payment to the brokers of any amounts which might have been owed them nor is there any connotation of wrong-doing therein. In fact, although appellant urges the absence of a legally binding obligation upon the corporation, appellant argues this suit should have been brought against the stockholders as being liable as individuals on a quantum meruit basis. Other facts will be discussed in this opinion where we deal directly with their legal implications.

At the end of a two-weeks trial which by agreement was held before a single judge without a jury, judgment was rendered for $171,250 in behalf of BM&T against Kingston based upon nineteen findings of fact and seven conclusions of law derived therefrom. A motion for new trial and/or modification of said findings, conclusions *348 and judgment pursuant to Code Ann. § 81A-152 (b) was then filed. After that motion was overruled this appeal followed.

It should be noted that the trial court’s judgment also included a decision on the claims of the other litigants inter sese, excepting Linda Poland, but we are not called upon to consider those rulings.

1. The legal principle which is determinative of many of the questions so capably presented by all nine briefs on this appeal was first enunciated in 1853 by Justice (later Chief Justice) Warner 2 in Wiley, Parish & Co. v. Kelsey, 13 Ga. 223. Generically referred to as "the any evidence rule,” it provides that when a non-jury single-judge judgment is reviewed in the Georgia appellate courts neither the Supreme Court nor the Court of Appeals will interfere with a finding by the trial tribunal "where there is any evidence to support it.” That phrase, including the italicization of the word "any,” comes from Balkcom v. Vickers, 220 Ga. 345, 348 (138 SE2d 868). There Justice (now Chief Justice) Grice pointed out that this rule stems historically from the long struggle in our state for the establishment of a Supreme Court, "one of the charges of the opposition being that this court would re-try factual issues.” Thus, our appellate courts are limited to "correction of errors of law” as stated in the Georgia Constitution. Justice Grice also noted our "any evidence” requirement differs from *349 the standards used by other judicial systems including the federal reviewing courts where their inquiry is "whether the evidence is 'substantial’ or whether the finding is 'clearly erroneous,’ or 'manifestly wrong’.”

As we pointed out in Pinkerton & Laws v. Atlantis Realty, 128 Ga. App. 662, 665 (197 SE2d 749) this "any evidence rule” still applies even though Code Ann. § 81A-152 (a) which was added in 1969 to our Civil Practice Act of 1966 duplicated Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and reads, "Findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous. . .” Since the instant appeal is from the Civil Court of Fulton County, we observe that in Spivey v. Mayson, 124 Ga. App. 775 (186 SE2d 154) this court ruled that Code Ann. § 81A-152 applies to that trial tribunal.

Concomitant with this principle is the directive that "After judgment every presumption and inference favors it and the evidence must be construed to uphold rather than to destroy it. [Cit.]” Givens v. Gray, 126 Ga. App. 309, 310 (190 SE2d 607). Thus, in considering arguments concerning the fact findings we can not disturb the judge’s findings and judgment absent some error of law. First National Bank of Atlanta v. Langford, 126 Ga. App. 325, 329 (190 SE2d 803).

2. From our review of the transcript and our determination that there is present therein the necessary amount of testimony to satisfy the "any evidence” principle we must rule adversely to appellant on those enumerations of error which contest the trial judge’s findings of fact. Accordingly, we hold there is no merit to enumerations Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 14 and 15.

3. The tenth enumeration of error attacks the court’s legal conclusions dealing with an allegation as to dual agency.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.E.2d 118, 132 Ga. App. 346, 1974 Ga. App. LEXIS 1688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingston-development-co-v-kenerly-gactapp-1974.