MATHEW DAVID ELLERBEE, AS OF THE ESTATE OF JACQUELINE ELLERBEE v. TOMMY DOTSON

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 2026
DocketA25A1604
StatusPublished

This text of MATHEW DAVID ELLERBEE, AS OF THE ESTATE OF JACQUELINE ELLERBEE v. TOMMY DOTSON (MATHEW DAVID ELLERBEE, AS OF THE ESTATE OF JACQUELINE ELLERBEE v. TOMMY DOTSON) 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
MATHEW DAVID ELLERBEE, AS OF THE ESTATE OF JACQUELINE ELLERBEE v. TOMMY DOTSON, (Ga. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., HODGES and PIPKIN, 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

March 16, 2026

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A25A1604. ELLERBEE et al. v. DOTSON.

MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.

This appeal concerns the ownership of real property currently titled in the name

of Matthew Ellerbee. Tommy Dotson, who renovated the house on the property and

whose daughter lives there, argues that Ellerbee’s late aunt, Jacquelyn Ellerbee,1

agreed before her death to sell the property to him. Dotson brought a direct action

against Matthew Ellerbee, individually and as the executor of Jacquelyn Ellerbee’s

estate, and against Ellerbee Enterprises, LLC (collectively, “Ellerbee”). He also

brought a de novo appeal of an adverse magistrate court judgment in a dispossessory

1 At places in the record, Jacquelyn Ellerbee’s first name is spelled “Jacqueline.” Because she signed her will with the spelling “Jacquelyn,” we use that spelling in our opinion. proceeding brought against him by Ellerbee.2 The direct action and appeal were

consolidated in superior court, which entered a ruling in Dotson’s favor on cross-

motions for summary judgment.

Ellerbee appeals from the superior court’s grant of summary judgment to

Dotson, and he has pointed to the existence of genuine issues of material fact

regarding whether Jacquelyn Ellerbee agreed to sell the property to Dotson. Those

fact questions preclude summary judgment on Dotson’s various claims, including the

claims Dotson brought in the appeal from the magistrate court judgment. So we

reverse the grant of summary judgment to Dotson and the award of relief premised on

that grant. We do not reach the superior court’s denial of summary judgment to

Ellerbee because Ellerbee has not challenged that ruling on appeal.

1. Facts and procedural history

2 OCGA § 15-10-41(b)(1) requires de novo appeals from a magistrate court judgment to state or superior court. See also OCGA § 5-3-5(b) (providing that a reviewing court shall conduct a de novo proceeding under the Superior and State Court Appellate Practice Act if such a proceeding is specified by law). “Upon a de novo appeal, the state or superior court is to try the issue anew and pass original judgments on the questions involved as if there had been no previous trial.” Long v. Greenwood Homes, 285 Ga. 560, 562 (679 SE2d 712) (2009) (citations and punctuation omitted). 2 We review a grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo, construing the

evidence “most favorably towards the nonmoving party, who is given the benefit of

all reasonable doubts and possible inferences.” Welborn v. Smith, 377 Ga. App. 298,

298(1)(a) (922 SE2d 430) (2025) (citation and punctuation omitted).

So viewed, the evidence shows that Ellerbee Enterprises obtained title to the

property at issue in 2003. Jacquelyn Ellerbee became the sole member of Ellerbee

Enterprises after her husband’s death. Ellerbee Enterprieses was administratively

dissolved in 2015.

In August 2017, Jacquelyn Ellerbee met with Dotson to discuss Dotson buying

the property. At that meeting, Jacquelyn Ellerbee told Dotson that she could not

provide a warranty deed for the property because there was a lien on it associated with

her late husband. She expressed concern that if she gave him a warranty deed she

might get in trouble, or even be arrested, for “selling something she didn’t own.”

Instead, she said “let’s call it rent” and indicated that “she felt good [that] she could

get away with this if it was rent.” Jacquelyn Ellerbee told Dotson that she would give

him the warranty deed at a future time.

3 Dotson agreed to pay Jacquelyn Ellerbee a $55,000 “purchase price” that was

amortized to $625 per month. He agreed to pay Jacqueline Ellerbee $1,000 a month,

which covered the $625 as well as taxes and utilities. He gave Jacquelyn Ellerbee

$5,000 in cash at their meeting.

Jacquelyn Ellerbee and Dotson wrote the terms of this agreement on a paper

towel, which they signed. The record contains a copy of the paper towel. Although

mostly illegible, that copy includes some discernable phrases, including “$55,000

purchase,” “$5,000 cash,” “$665/mo,” and “$1,000/mo.” It also refers to

Jacquelyn Ellerbee’s “deceased husband’s judgment that requires this transaction be

kept quiet because of possible legal ramifications.”

Dotson took possession of the property and renovated the house on it, into

which his adult daughter moved. He made some monthly payments to Jacquelyn

Ellerbee of either $625 or $1,000, but he sometimes missed payments. Jacquelyn

Ellerbee continued to pay the property taxes and some of the utilities on the property.

Dotson referred to the monthly payments as “rent.” He testified in his

deposition that he did not remember if those payments were characterized as “rent”

on the paper towel.

4 Jacquelyn Ellerbee passed away in 2020, without having given Dotson a

warranty deed on the property. Her will named her late husband’s nephew, Matthew

Ellerbee, as both her executor and her heir. At Jacquelyn Ellerbee’s funeral, Dotson

introduced himself to Matthew Ellerbee as “the renter.”

On January 14, 2022, Matthew Ellerbee, who had become the sole member of

Ellerbee Enterprises, executed a quitclaim deed conveying title to the property from

Ellerbee Enterprises to himself. He then filed a dispossessory proceeding in magistrate

court and obtained a judgment and writ of possession against Dotson.

Dotson appealed the magistrate court judgment to state court. Dotson then filed

this action in superior court, asking the trial court to recognize a trust in Dotson’s

favor with regard to the property; to decree that the property be titled in his name and

that the January 2022 quitclaim deed be canceled of record; and to require Matthew

Ellerbee to execute any instruments necessary to vest title in the property to Dotson.

Dotson’s appeal from the magistrate court judgment and his direct action against

Ellerbee were consolidated in superior court.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In the order on appeal,

the trial court found that, as a matter of law, Dotson and Jacquelyn Ellerbee had

5 entered into an enforceable verbal contract for Dotson to purchase the property,

which was memorialized by the signed writing on the paper towel; that this gave rise

to a trust in Dotson’s favor; that Dotson performed his obligations under the purchase

agreement and was entitled to specific performance of that agreement, a deed

conveying title in the property to him, and cancellation of the January 2022 quitclaim

deed. The trial court denied Ellerbee’s motion for summary judgment; granted

Dotson’s motion for summary judgment; ordered Ellerbee Enterprises and Matthew

Ellerbee to execute a warranty deed conveying the property to Dotson; and required

that Dotson be reimbursed the funds he had paid into the court registry in connection

with the magistrate court judgment.

2. Analysis

Ellerbee asserts several enumerations of error that all challenge the trial court’s

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Related

Long v. Greenwood Homes, Inc.
679 S.E.2d 712 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2009)
NORTHSIDE BUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY v. Foures
411 S.E.2d 87 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1991)
Felix v. State
523 S.E.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1999)
Hipes & Norton, P.C. v. Pye Automobile Sales of Chattanooga, Inc.
562 S.E.2d 729 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2002)

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MATHEW DAVID ELLERBEE, AS OF THE ESTATE OF JACQUELINE ELLERBEE v. TOMMY DOTSON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathew-david-ellerbee-as-of-the-estate-of-jacqueline-ellerbee-v-tommy-gactapp-2026.