Pillar Development, Inc. v. Fuqua Construction Co.

645 S.E.2d 64, 284 Ga. App. 858, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1037, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 357
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 27, 2007
DocketA06A1673
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 645 S.E.2d 64 (Pillar Development, Inc. v. Fuqua Construction Co.) 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
Pillar Development, Inc. v. Fuqua Construction Co., 645 S.E.2d 64, 284 Ga. App. 858, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1037, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 357 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.

Pillar Development, Inc. (Pillar) entered into an agreement to sell 81 residential subdivision lots to Fuqua Construction Company, Inc. and Newman Homes, Inc. (jointly referred to as FCC/NH) for $90,000 per lot representing a total sales price of $7,290,000. After FCC/NH refused to close on the agreement, Pillar retained FCC/NH’s $150,000 earnest money deposit as liquidated damages pursuant to the agreement. FCC/NH sued Pillar and the escrow agent 1 seeking to recover the earnest money and claiming that its refusal to close was justified by Pillar’s breach of the agreement. Pillar answered and counterclaimed asserting that FCC/NH breached the agreement by refusing to close and seeking award of the earnest money as reasonable liquidated damages under the agreement. 2 The trial court granted FCC/NH’s motion for summary judgment on their claims against Pillar, and denied Pillar’s motion for summary judgment on its counterclaim. Pillar appeals from these rulings, and for the following reasons, we reverse.

The agreement for sale of the 81 subdivided lots by Pillar to FCC/NH provided in section 7.1.10 that, prior to closing, Pillar would develop the lots so that they “will be subdivided and platted to permit the construction of single family homes in accordance with all applicable rules, regulations, ordinances and requirements of each governmental authority having jurisdiction over the Property.” In addition to setting forth Pillar’s responsibility for development of streets, drainage, water systems and all utilities necessary for the construction of single family homes on the lots, the agreement also contained the following provisions with respect to developing sewer service for the lots:

[FCC/NH] hereby acknowledges that the Subdivision shall not be serviced by public sewer but by individual septic systems. [Pillar] has received approval from the Fulton County Health Department for such systems and shall have no further responsibility with regard to sewer service or systems for the Subdivision (except the Amenity Feature). *859 [FCC/NH] hereby acknowledges that development, construction and installation of septic systems shall be the responsibility and at the expense of [FCC/NH],

Because the property at issue is located within the jurisdiction of Fulton County in an area with no access to the public sewer system, the County will not permit the construction of a single family home on any lot in the subdivision unless the Fulton County Heath Department (FCHD) has approved the installation of a septic system on that lot. Approval is obtained with respect to each individual lot by providing the FCHD with evidence, including a satisfactory water percolation test, showing that the lot is suitable for installation of a septic system.

Prior to the closing date, FCC/NH became concerned about whether Pillar had acquired approval from the FCHD for installation of a septic system on all the individual lots. Based on these concerns, FCC/NH asserts that it orally asked Pillar to provide a written guaranty that Pillar would buy back any lot on which FCC/NH could not obtain a building permit after the closing because the lot lacked septic system approval from the FCHD, and that Pillar agreed to bring such a guaranty to the closing. According to Pillar, when FCC/NH made the request for the buy-back guarantee two days before the closing date, Pillar considered the request but agreed to provide the buy-back guarantee only if FCC/NH would agree to renegotiate the purchase price of the lots. No renegotiation occurred. At the closing, Pillar presented a proposed letter agreement to FCC/NH stating that it had received “development approval” from the FCHD for the use of septic systems on the lots; that it understood an “additional approval” must be obtained from the FCHD for use of a septic system on each individual lot, and that, with respect to any lot on which FCC/NH was unable to obtain such additional approval, Pillar would “assist and support your efforts to obtain such approval.” The proposed letter agreement was not adopted. Because FCC/NH suspected that Pillar had not obtained approval from the FCHD for installation of septic systems on all the individual lots, and because Pillar refused to provide the requested buy-back guarantee, FCC/NH refused to close on the agreement for purchase of the lots.

FCC/NH contends that the agreement unambiguously sets forth the intent of the parties that it was part of Pillar’s development duty prior to closing to obtain approval from the FCHD for the installation of a septic system on each of the 81 lots, so that after closing FCC/NH could immediately obtain permits from Fulton County to construct single family homes with septic systems on the lots. Pillar contends to the contrary that the agreement did not require it to obtain FCHD approval for the installation of septic systems on each individual lot, *860 but only required it to obtain general FCHD approval for use of septic systems on the lots. Nevertheless, the record shows that, prior to closing, Pillar had obtained FCHD approval for the installation of septic systems on 79 or 80 of the individual lots. Discovery conducted during the subsequent litigation showed that, at the time of closing, Pillar had failed to obtain FCHD approval for the installation of septic systems on one or two of the lots.

We need not determine whether this dispute over the intent of the agreement can be resolved as a matter of law by the rules of contract construction, or whether it presents a factual issue to be resolved by a trier of fact. Even if we assume, as FCC/NH claims, that Pillar had a duty under the agreement to obtain septic system approval on all the lots, and that its failure to do so prior to closing breached the agreement, for FCC/NH to base its refusal to close and demand for refund of earnest money on this breach it had to show compliance with the written notice requirements of the agreement relating to the breach. Where a contract contains provisions requiring written notice of a claim for breach, “[t]he failure to give notice as required or to show waiver by [the party entitled to notice] is an independent bar to the maintenance of a successful cause of action on the contract.” Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Stevens, 130 Ga. App. 363, 369 (203 SE2d 587) (1973). Moreover, oral notice is not sufficient where written notice is required. Id.

If FCC/NH had good reason to believe that Pillar breached the agreement by failing to obtain septic system approvals from the FCHD, it had a duty under the agreement to give Pillar written notice of the breach before refusing to close. If Pillar’s failure breached the seller’s representations or warranties contained in section 7.1 of the agreement, as FCC/NH claims, then section 7.2 specifically provides:

In the event any of the warranties and covenants contained [in section 7.1] are not true on the Closing Date, [FCC/NH]... shall be entitled either: (a) to terminate this Agreement by written notice to [Pillar] whereupon the Earnest Money shall be returned to [FCC/NH], and no party hereto shall have any further rights or obligations hereunder; or (b) to waive such untrue warranties and covenants and proceed with Closing under the terms and conditions of this Agreement with no reduction in the Purchase Price.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
645 S.E.2d 64, 284 Ga. App. 858, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1037, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pillar-development-inc-v-fuqua-construction-co-gactapp-2007.