Palmer v. Forrest, Mackey & Associates Inc.

304 S.E.2d 704, 251 Ga. 304, 1983 Ga. LEXIS 771
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 7, 1983
Docket39585; 39759
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 304 S.E.2d 704 (Palmer v. Forrest, Mackey & Associates Inc.) 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
Palmer v. Forrest, Mackey & Associates Inc., 304 S.E.2d 704, 251 Ga. 304, 1983 Ga. LEXIS 771 (Ga. 1983).

Opinion

Hill, Chief Justice.

This appeal involves the relative priorities of an asserted equitable lien, materialmen’s liens, and a deed to secure debt.

On January 7,1982, Forrest, Mackey and Associates, Inc., a real estate company (the realtor), sold Lot 4 of Hidden Lakes Subdivision to Roby and Mackey Contractors, Inc. (the builder), by warranty deed. On January 11, 1982, the builder obtained a $64,000 construction loan from, and gave a deed to secure debt on Lot 4 to, Citizens Bank (the lender). This security deed was recorded on January 22,1982, but the lender failed to record the warranty deed which had been entrusted to it by the builder for recording. The builder commenced construction of a house for resale on Lot 4.

On February 26, 1982, Frank Palmer (purchaser), having obtained from the lender an acceptable interest rate, contracted with the builder to construct the house on Lot 4 for $83,000 and paid $20,000 cash as a downpayment. The lender had agreed to loan the purchaser $40,000 at closing. However, the purchaser was not informed that there was a construction loan and security deed on the property and the purchaser contends he was advised by the builder that there were no liens on the property.

[305]*305On March 12,1982, the purchaser paid the builder an additional $10,000 toward the purchase price and later paid independent contractors $10,632 loaned by the lender, for a swimming pool and other improvements.

On June 17, 1982, the builder informed the purchaser that the builder was going into bankruptcy without completing construction of the house and offered to deed the property to the purchaser subject to the $64,000 construction loan. This was the first time the purchaser learned of the existence of this loan. In view of the purchaser’s investment in the property, this offer was refused.

The purchaser filed suit on June 25,1982, seeking to establish an equitable lien on the property, naming the realtor, the record titleholder, as defendant. On July 2,1982, a quitclaim deed from the realtor to the builder was executed and recorded, and on July 9 the lender commenced foreclosure proceedings. The purchaser then added the lender and the builder as defendants. Shiver Lumber Company and other materialmen of the builder were allowed to intervene. The foreclosure was allowed to proceed and the sale produced $75,000 now held by the lender subject to the claims advanced in this litigation.

Thereafter, the lender’s motions for summary judgment as against the purchaser and materialmen were granted and the purchaser and materialmen appeal.

1. The purchaser argues that his equitable lien in the property attached when he made the first payment of $20,000 on February 26, 1982. He also contends that the lender’s security deed was effective as to him, a third party without notice of the security deed, only after the quitclaim deed from the realtor to the builder was recorded on July 2, 1982. He reasons that since he is a third party under OCGA § 44-2-2 (b) (Code Ann. §§ 67-2501, 67-2503), which provides that liens or deeds which must be recorded and are not, are effective only from the time they are filed,1 the builder only effectively acquired title on July 2,1982, and that therefore the lender’s security deed was perfected as after acquired property only on that date. Consequently, the purchaser urges that the security deed is inferior to his lien of February 26,1982. Compare Murray v. Chulak, 250 Ga. 765, 769 (300 SE2d 493) (1983).

This argument might be valid if the purchaser had dealt with the realtor as the owner of the property. See OCGA § 44-2-2 (b) (Code Ann. §§ 67-2501,67-2503), supra. It is clear, however, by his dealings [306]*306with the builder, the realtor and the lender, that the purchaser was aware of the fact that the builder owned the property. The purchaser contracted with the builder and in his testimony the purchaser admitted that he thought at all times that the builder owned the property.2 Therefore, the purchaser cannot claim priority by virtue of the lender’s failure to record the deed from the realtor to the builder, and as between the purchaser, the builder and the lender, the lender’s previously recorded security deed has priority over the purchaser’s equitable claim.

While we recognize the equitable principle that “When one of two innocent persons must suffer by the act of a third person, he who put it in the power of the third person to inflict the injury shall bear the loss,” OCGA § 23-1-14 (Code Ann. § 37-113), we do not find that the injury was solely due to the lender’s failure to record the warranty deed from the realtor to the builder. As the purchaser argues, if he had checked the title to Lot 4 he would have found that the builder was not the owner of record. Such finding should have put the purchaser on notice not to contract with the builder, at least not until after the builder acquired record title. Hence the purchaser enabled the builder to inflict the injury. Accordingly, the purchaser’s argument that the lender should not be allowed to disregard the recording statutes and what was revealed thereby is without merit.

While we recognize the purchaser’s equitable rights in the property because of the purchase money he has expended, OCGA § 53-12-26 (1) (Code Ann. § 108-106); Horner v. Savannah Valley Enterprises, 234 Ga. 371, 375 (216 SE2d 113) (1975); Shubert v. Speir, 201 Ga. 20 (3) (38 SE2d 835) (1946), his rights are not entitled to priority over the lender’s security deed under the facts of this case. Thus, in Case No. 39585 the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to the lender and in denying summary judgment to the purchaser.

[307]*3072. The materialmen appeal the grant of summary judgment against them and in favor of the lender. Like the purchaser, they argue that because the warranty deed to the builder from the realtor was unrecorded, under OCGA § 44-2-2 (b) (Code Ann. §§ 67-2501, 67-2503), quoted in footnote 1 above, they are not chargeable with constructive notice of the lender’s recorded security deed until the chain of title was completed by recording the quitclaim deed on July 2, 1982.

The trial court held that the materialmen were nevertheless on constructive notice of the lender’s recorded deed to secure debt because they were aware of the builder’s exclusive possession of the property, and that, therefore, under OCGA § 44-5-169 (Code Ann. § 85-408), they were also on constructive notice of the lender’s prior recorded deed to secure debt. We disagree.

OCGA § 44-5-169 (Code Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
304 S.E.2d 704, 251 Ga. 304, 1983 Ga. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-forrest-mackey-associates-inc-ga-1983.