McMurray v. Housworth

638 S.E.2d 421, 282 Ga. App. 280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 6, 2006
DocketA06A1603
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 638 S.E.2d 421 (McMurray v. Housworth) 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
McMurray v. Housworth, 638 S.E.2d 421, 282 Ga. App. 280 (Ga. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

Michael and Deborah Housworth sold a twenty-four-acre tract of land which the purchasers — Lance and Melanie McMurray, and James and Alberta McMurray — subdivided into two tracts. A lake *281 created by a dam is situated on the property. The McMurrays brought this suit against the Housworths for breach of their general warranty of title upon discovering after purchasing the property that the owner and operator of the dam holds a floodwater detention easement that burdens the tract. The superior court awarded summary judgment to the Housworths on the ground that this easement is not such an encumbrance on the property as breaches the title warranty. We disagree and reverse.

Lance and Melanie McMurray purchased one of the twelve-acre parcels from the Housworths for $120,000 in 2004. On the same date, James and Alberta McMurray purchased the other parcel for the same price. The parcels were conveyed by warranty deeds that contained general warranties of title without any limitations applicable here. The McMurrays informed the Housworths that they were buying the property to build single-family residences on each parcel.

Apparently, however, the McMurrays failed to discover that recorded within the chain of title to their property in 1962 was a “floodwater retarding structure” easement which had been granted to the Oconee River Soil Conservation District. This easement is for construction, operation, and maintenance of a floodwater retarding structure or dam; for the flowage of waters in, over, upon, or through the dam; and for the permanent storage and temporary detention of any waters that are impounded, stored, or detained by the dam. It also reserved in the grantor and his successors the right to use the easement area for any purpose not inconsistent with full use and enjoyment of the grantee’s rights and privileges, i.e., it is nonexclusive. After learning of the easement following their purchase of the property, the McMurrays demanded that the Housworths compensate them for the damages they would suffer as a result of the restrictions thereby placed on their usage.

Because the Housworths failed to comply with these demands, the McMurrays brought this suit against them seeking damages for breach of their warranties of title. The McMurrays moved for partial summary judgment on the question of whether the floodwater detention easement constitutes an encumbrance on the property breaching the warranties of title. The Housworths filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the ground that, as a matter of law, the easement does not breach the warranties of title.

In agreement with the Housworths, the superior court awarded summary judgment to them and denied the McMurrays’ motion for partial summary judgment. The court concluded that floodwater detention easements, like easements for public roadways and zoning regulations, do not breach a general warranty of title. Moreover, the court found that the McMurrays had notice of the easement because it was recorded within their chain of title and because the dam is *282 visible on their property. The court concluded that the McMurrays were therefore under a duty to inquire about any use restrictions resulting from the easement. Additionally, the court held that the Housworths have not breached their general warranty of title because the McMurrays have not been evicted from their property, as the easement is nonexclusive and houses may be built in easement areas if certain requirements are met.

1. The McMurrays contend that the superior court erred in analogizing the floodwater detention easement to a public roadway easement or zoning regulation and in thereby concluding that a floodwater detention easement is not the type of easement that breaches a general warranty of title.

(a) Each of the deeds in this case contained a general warranty of title in which the grantors agreed to “defend the right and title to the above described property, unto [the grantees], their heirs, assigns, and successors in title, against the claims of all persons.” Under OCGA § 44-5-62, “[a] general warranty of title against the claims of all persons includes covenants of a right to sell, of quiet enjoyment, and of freedom from encumbrances.” “An incumbrance has been defined as ‘Any right to, or interest in, land which may subsist in another to the diminution of its value, but consistent with the passing of the fee,’ and this definition . . . encompasses an easement or right of way.” 1 OCGA § 44-5-63 provides that “[i]n a deed, a general warranty of title against the claims of all persons covers defects in the title even if they are known to the purchaser at the time he takes the deed.” 2

(b) The rule in Georgia, as established in the early case of Desvergers v. Willis, 3 is that the existence of a public road on land, of which the purchaser knew or should have known at the time of the purchase, is not such an encumbrance as would constitute a breach of a general warranty of title. 4 The Desvergers rule is thus an exception to the general rule stated in OCGA § 44-5-63 that a general warranty of title by deed covers even defects known to the purchaser at the time he takes the deed. 5

Although the Desvergers rule is not uniform throughout the country, it is the majority rule. 6 In adopting the rule, the court in *283 Desvergers concluded that a contrary holding would produce a “crop of litigation” that would be “almost interminable.” 7 The reason, as later explained by the Supreme Court of Iowa in Harrison v. The Des Moines & Ft. Dodge R. Co., 8 was that the immense number of warranty deeds then in existence rarely contained exceptions as to public roadways because of the universal belief that roadway access was a benefit rather than a burden to land. Therefore, a determination that public roadway easements were warranty-breaching encumbrances would have created innumerable liabilities where none had been thought to exist.

Courts in other states have also based their adoption of the Desvergers rule on the broader ground that where easements are open, notorious, and presumably known to the purchaser at the time of the purchase, that knowledge will exclude the easement from operation of a title warranty. 9 These courts have reasoned that where the encumbrance involves an open and obvious physical condition of the property, the purchaser is presumed to have seen it and fixed his price with reference to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
638 S.E.2d 421, 282 Ga. App. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurray-v-housworth-gactapp-2006.