MOXIE CAPITAL, LLC v. DELMONT 21, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 4, 2022
DocketA21A1574
StatusPublished

This text of MOXIE CAPITAL, LLC v. DELMONT 21, LLC (MOXIE CAPITAL, LLC v. DELMONT 21, LLC) 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
MOXIE CAPITAL, LLC v. DELMONT 21, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION RICKMAN, C. J., MCFADDEN, P. J., and SENIOR APPELLATE JUDGE PHIPPS

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

February 4, 2022

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A21A1574. MOXIE CAPITAL, LLC v. DELMONT 21, LLC et al.

PHIPPS, Senior Appellate Judge.

Moxie Capital, LLC (“Moxie”) appeals from the superior court’s Order and

Final Judgment adopting a special master’s findings and awarding Delmont 21, LLC

(“Delmont”) fee simple title to two parcels of property after Moxie failed to properly

redeem the properties from Delmont, the purchaser of the properties’ tax deeds.

Moxie argues that the superior court erred in finding that (1) its tender of personal

checks pursuant to its attempt to redeem the properties was not a valid tender under

OCGA §§ 48-4-42 and 48-4-44 (c), (2) other than accepting a statutorily proper

tender, a tax deed holder has no duty to cooperate in a reasonable manner with a party

seeking redemption of properties under the tax deed redemption statutes; and (3) no

genuine issues of material fact exist surrounding Delmont’s alleged obstruction of Moxie’s redemption effort and whether such actions by Delmont constituted a waiver

of the tender requirements, including the form of tender. For the following reasons,

we affirm the superior court’s final judgment.

At the outset, we note that Moxie’s appellate briefs do not comply with this

Court’s rules in a number of respects. Notably, many of the factual recitations do not

contain proper citations to the specific page numbers of the record or transcript that

are essential to consideration of the enumerated errors. See Court of Appeals Rule 25

(a) (1), (c) (2) (i). Factual representations contained in the parties’ briefs that are

unsupported by evidence of record cannot be considered in the appellate process. See

Crewe Acquisitions v. Kendrick, 351 Ga. App. 624, 626, n. 5 (832 SE2d 442) (2019).

In addition, Moxie’s briefs include numerous conclusory legal statements and

arguments devoid of any citation of authorities – or citation to relevant authorities –

in violation of Court of Appeals Rule 25 (a) (3).

Briefs that do not conform to our rules hinder our ability to determine the basis

and substance of an appellant’s appeal. Williams v. State, 318 Ga. App. 744, 744-745

(734 SE2d 745) (2012). In addition, “[t]he burden is upon the party alleging error to

show it affirmatively in the record,” and “[a]ppellate judges should not be expected

to take pilgrimages into records in search of error without the compass of citation and

2 argument.” Bennett v. Quick, 305 Ga. App. 415, 416 (699 SE2d 539) (2010) (citations

and punctuation omitted). Here, many of Moxie’s appellate claims are unsupported

by argument or citations to relevant authority, and those claims, therefore, may be

deemed abandoned. See Court of Appeals Rule 25 (c) (2); Bennett, 305 Ga. App. at

416-417.

Nonetheless, we turn to the relevant facts and merits of this appeal, as best as

we can discern them. The facts this Court can confirm show that in October 2017,

Theodore Jackson, as Sheriff of Fulton County, conducted tax sales on behalf of

Reginald Jackson, as trustee for 0 Moreland Trust, involving two parcels of property

in Atlanta. Delmont acquired the fieri facias tax liens on the properties and recorded

tax deeds on November 9, 2017. After the one-year period following the tax sales,

Delmont began foreclosing on the right to redeem the properties from the tax sales

pursuant to OCGA § 48-4-45 by publishing notices in the Fulton Daily Report. The

notices tracked the statutory language in OCGA § 48-4-46, stating that “[t]he property

may be redeemed any time before November 20, 2018 by payment of the redemption

price as fixed and provided by law to the entity listed below at the following address:

Delmont 21, LLC[,] PO Box [XXXXXX,] Atlanta, GA 30342.”

3 During the afternoon of November 19, 2018, the last day for redemption of the

properties subject to the tax deeds, Moxie purchased fee simple title to the properties

(and, as a result, the right to redeem the properties subject to the tax deeds) from

Reginald Jackson. Moxie’s manager, Thomas Hills, purportedly recorded the

warranty deeds immediately after closing and both called and texted Delmont via its

manager, Thomas Murtaugh, beginning at 1:55 p.m. to obtain the payoff amounts and

options for delivery of the payoff. Murtaugh testified by deposition that he was in a

real estate closing on the afternoon when Hills attempted to contact him. Murtaugh

returned Hills’s first call at 2:03 p.m., but the return call went unanswered. When

Murtaugh failed to respond to other calls and texts, Hills arranged an evening

delivery to Murtaugh’s home address of two personal checks on the account of

Bonneau H. Dickson, Jr., a member of Moxie but a non-party to the transactions.

Delmont subsequently returned Dickson’s checks to Hills, indicating they were “a

legally insufficient tender.”

On December 3, 2018, Moxie petitioned to quiet title and for a restraining

order, an accounting on and cancellation of a security deed as to both properties,

attorney fees and punitive damages for willful tort (obstruction of the right of

redemption), and recovery of excess bid funds from the tax sales. Moxie amended its

4 petition several times, and specifically requested the appointment of a special master.

Delmont answered, counterclaimed to quiet title, and also requested the appointment

of a special master. The superior court thereafter appointed a special master, and later

issued a second order giving the special master authority to determine the parties’

quiet title claims.

Delmont filed a motion for summary judgment, which it subsequently

amended. Moxie also filed a motion for partial summary judgment on its quiet title

claim.

The special master held a hearing, made numerous factual findings and

conclusions of law, and issued a report on May 1, 2020, recommending that Moxie’s

motion for partial summary judgment on its quiet title claim be denied and that

Delmont’s motion for summary judgment on Moxie’s quiet title claim be granted. The

special master, however, recommended in this particular report that Delmont’s motion

for summary judgment on its counterclaim for quiet title be denied because Delmont

had failed to introduce evidence showing that it complied with the tax deed

foreclosure statutes. As to the merits of the quiet title claims, the special master found

that Moxie’s tender of personal checks was insufficient tender under Georgia law.

Further, the special master implicitly found that, contrary to Moxie’s argument,

5 Delmont did not act in bad faith when Murtaugh failed to respond to Moxie’s calls

and texts on the afternoon of November 19, 2018. According to the special master,

Tom Hills for the Petitioner[,] knowing that the address to present the proceeds was a p.o.

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