McBEE v. ASPIRE AT WEST MIDTOWN APARTMENTS, L.P

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 30, 2017
DocketS17A0683
Status200

This text of McBEE v. ASPIRE AT WEST MIDTOWN APARTMENTS, L.P (McBEE v. ASPIRE AT WEST MIDTOWN APARTMENTS, L.P) 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
McBEE v. ASPIRE AT WEST MIDTOWN APARTMENTS, L.P, (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

302 Ga. 662 FINAL COPY

S17A0683, S17A0684. McBEE et al. v. ASPIRE AT WEST MIDTOWN APARTMENTS, L.P.; and vice versa

NAHMIAS, Justice.

Thomas R. McBee and his wife Mary A. McBee (the “McBees”) and

Aspire at West Midtown Apartments, L.P. (“Aspire”) are adjoining landowners

on Green Street in Atlanta. The McBees claim title by prescription — adverse

possession for more than 20 years — to a rectangular strip of land measuring

about 24 feet by 58 feet (the “Disputed Area”) located on a lot to which Aspire

holds record title (the “Aspire Lot”). Aspire used this lot and several adjoining

properties it owns to develop an apartment complex, thereby depriving the

McBees of the use of the Disputed Area. The McBees sued Aspire, and the trial

court granted Aspire’s motion for summary judgment on the McBees’ adverse

possession claim. These two appeals followed.

As explained below, in Aspire’s appeal (Case No. S17A0684), we

summarily affirm the trial court’s order denying Aspire’s motion to dismiss the McBees’ appeal for delay in filing the record appendix. As for the McBees’

appeal (Case No. S17A0683), the trial court ruled that a deed signed by Thomas

McBee in 1974 shows conclusively that the McBees lack a good faith claim of

right to the Disputed Area. However, the law presumes the existence of a good

faith claim of right, and the evidence in the existing record does not

conclusively rebut this presumption. Accordingly, we reverse the order granting

summary judgment to Aspire on the McBees’ adverse possession claim, and we

remand the case for the trial court to consider Aspire’s other arguments for

summary judgment.

1. This Court reviews the grant of summary judgment de novo. See

Cowart v. Widener, 287 Ga. 622, 624 (697 SE2d 779) (2010). Summary

judgment is proper only “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to

interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show

that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party

is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law[.]” OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). Thus,

to prevail on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact, so that the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A defendant may do this by either presenting evidence negating an essential element of the plaintiff’s claims or establishing from the

2 record an absence of evidence to support such claims.

Cowart, 287 Ga. at 623 (citations and punctuation omitted). The McBees, as the

parties opposing summary judgment, are entitled to have the evidence in the

record viewed in the light most favorable to them and to have all reasonable

inferences from the evidence drawn in their favor. See id. at 624.

So viewed, the record shows the following. Thomas’s grandmother,

Dorine McBee, once owned both the lot where the McBees live (the “McBee

Lot”) and the Aspire Lot, and she lived in a house on the Aspire Lot. She

conveyed the McBee Lot to her son, James S. McBee, in two deeds executed in

1948 and 1955, and he built a house there, where he and his wife Earlene

McBee raised their two sons, Thomas and his older brother James R. McBee.

When James S. McBee died in 1961, the McBee Lot passed to his wife Earlene

and their two sons. Around that time, when Thomas was seven or eight years

old, he began maintaining and landscaping the Aspire Lot in addition to the

McBee Lot. On October 18, 1965, Dorine McBee executed a will nominating

her daughter, Betty McBee Taylor (“Aunt Betty”), as executrix; leaving half of

her estate (minus $1,000) to Aunt Betty; and leaving the other half to Aunt Betty

as trustee for Thomas and his brother James R. until Thomas turned 21.

3 On December 26, 1973, Dorine McBee died. At the time, Aunt Betty and

her husband were living with Dorine on the Aspire Lot; Thomas was living in

Savannah. On March 9, 1974, three deeds were executed: Aunt Betty executed

a deed in her capacity as executrix conveying the Aspire Lot to herself for

$12,433.34; Aunt Betty executed another deed, individually and in her capacity

as executrix, that quitclaimed any interest she had in the McBee Lot (it appears

there was none) to “Earlene Cain McBee, Thomas R. McBee, [and] James R.

McBee”; and Thomas, his mother Earlene, and his brother James R. executed

a deed, “[i]ndividually and as sole surviving heirs of James S. McBee, deceased,

each of grantors being sui juris,” quitclaiming any interest they had in the Aspire

Lot to Aunt Betty.1

The quitclaim deed to the Aspire Lot described the property as:

BEGINNING at a point on the south side of Green Street 394 [feet] west of the intersection of the west side of Hemphill Avenue with the south side of Green Street; thence west along the south side of Green Street, 71.5 feet; thence south 125 feet; thence east 71.5 feet; thence north 125 feet to the south side of Green Street and the point of the beginning.

It then said:

1 James R. McBee died in 2013.

4 THE PURPOSE of this deed is to establish proper boundary lines between properties owned by Grantors and Grantee and to correct descriptions contained in [the 1948 and 1955 warranty deeds].

The quitclaim deed to the McBee Lot contained a similarly worded description

of that property’s boundaries and a similar purpose provision. Thomas deposed

that he did not understand the legal import of the deed he signed; he signed it

because his mother told him that it was necessary in order to settle his

grandmother’s estate.

Aunt Betty and her husband continued to live on the Aspire Lot, and

Earlene McBee continued to live on the McBee Lot. In 1977, Thomas and his

wife Mary moved in with Earlene. Thomas maintained and landscaped both the

McBee Lot and the Aspire Lot, including the Disputed Area.2 That spring,

Thomas acquired a large trailer with a 16-foot bed that he stored in the Disputed

Area. From that point on, he used the Disputed Area for parking and to store his

trailer, vehicles, machinery, automobile engines and other parts, and lumber.3

2 Based on the survey the McBees commissioned for this litigation, Thomas deposed that the Disputed Area is bounded on the east by the driveway on the Aspire Lot, on the south by a fence that no longer exists, on the west by the McBee Lot, and on the north by Green Street. 3 The family, including Thomas’s brother and Aunt Betty and her husband, used the Disputed Area for parking as far back as the 1960s. Thomas used the area for storage as early as 1967 or 1965, before he moved to Savannah, and when he got his first car in 1972, he parked it there.

5 Earlene McBee died in 1990. When Aunt Betty and her husband moved

to Florida in the early 1990s, they allowed a friend from the neighborhood to

stay in the house on the Aspire Lot. The woman was allowed to stay for a short

time after Aunt Betty conveyed the Aspire Lot to an investor on February 18,

1993, but when the woman moved out, the house was torn down. Due to

problems with vagrancy and thefts, Thomas posted “No Trespassing” signs on

trees in the Disputed Area (and the McBee Lot), called the police to report

trespassers, and put down concrete parking stops to prevent others from using

the Disputed Area for dumping or other purposes. On June 20, 2005, the

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McBEE v. ASPIRE AT WEST MIDTOWN APARTMENTS, L.P, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbee-v-aspire-at-west-midtown-apartments-lp-ga-2017.