The State of Georgia v. Nofree, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 1, 2024
DocketA24A0970
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
The State of Georgia v. Nofree, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., HODGES and WATKINS, JJ.

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

November 1, 2024

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A24A0969; A24A0970. NOFREE, LLC v. THE STATE OF GEORGIA, and vice versa.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

These interlocutory appeals arise from a petition to quiet title filed by NoFree,

LLC, regarding approximately 1,000 acres of coastal marshland in Bryan County (“the

peninsula”), naming the State of Georgia and any other persons who may have an

adverse claim, and contending it had title originating from the State’s grant of the

property to James Shuman in 1834 (“Shuman grant”). Only the State challenged the

petition. After the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court

determined that questions of material fact were presented and denied the cross-

motions, certifying its order for immediate review. This Court granted the parties’

applications for interlocutory appeal. In Case No. A24A0969, NoFree argues that the trial court erred by denying its

motion for summary judgment because, among other things, the boundary description

in the Shuman grant was sufficient as a matter of law to convey the peninsula to

Shuman (and to NoFree therefrom), and the trial court should have presumed that the

Shuman grant was valid. In Case No. A24A0670, the State argues that the trial court

erred by denying its motion for summary judgment because the Shuman grant was

void for a number of reasons and did not vest title in NoFree in light of the Protection

of Tidewaters Act, OCGA § 52-1-1, et seq. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and

remand for the trial court to enter summary judgment for the State.

We review a grant or denial of summary judgment, questions of statutory

interpretation, and interpretation of contracts of conveyance de novo.1 And we

construe the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant when reviewing

an order disposing of a motion for summary judgment.2

1 See Strickland v. CMCR Investments LLC, 279 Ga. 112, 114 (1) (610 SE2d 71) (2005); Herren v. Mitchell Elec. Membership Corp., 323 Ga. App. 517 (747 SE2d 63) (2013); Hill v. First Atlantic Bank, 323 Ga. App. 731, 732 (747 SE2d 892) (2013). 2 See Herren, 323 Ga. App. at 517. 2 The record shows that NoFree filed a petition to quiet title as to all the world

regarding a certain distinctively shaped piece of property near a large bend in the

Ogeechee River.3 The property is a long “balloon shaped”peninsula bounded on three

sides by the river except for a narrow neck of land on the property’s southwest side

connecting it to the Bryan County mainland, and the peninsula consists largely of

marshland that is subject to the ebb and flow of the tide. In 2016, NoFree acquired the

peninsula via a limited warranty deed.4 In its petition, NoFree included a chain of title

of 49 links, beginning with the 1834 grant from the State to Shuman.

In May 1834, a State head-right warrant directed the county surveyor to survey

and prepare a plat of “a tract of lands which shall contain five hundred acres in

[Bryan] County” for Shuman. In September 1834, a survey plat was prepared that

3 See OCGA § 23-3-60 et seq. See also Appendix 1, infra. NoFree’s petition describes the area as “a marsh and rice island bound by the Ogeechee River and laced with canals and dikes for rice propogation.” 4 The seller’s permitted exceptions attached to the limited warranty deed included, among others, “[t]itle, rights[,] and claims of the State of Georgia for any part of the insured premises which is determined to be Coastal Marshlands within the estuarine area as defined in the ‘Coastal Marshlands Protection Act of 1970[;]’” and “[t]itle to that portion of the property lying below the mean high watermark of the Ogeechee River and all tributaries and branches thereof, and of all canals, creeks[,] or waterways adjoining, abutting or flowing through the captioned property, to the extent same are deemed to be navigable waters.’” 3 refers to the May 1834 warrant, which plat includes a hand-drawn sketch of the

property showing a balloon-shaped peninsula with a small strip of land at the bottom;

the entire peninsula is bounded on all other sides by the “Great Ogeechee River,” and

it is labeled as “James Shuman 500 acres Marsh Land.”5

In December 1834, a grant was prepared giving Shuman property described as

500 acres lying in Bryan County, “butting and bounding on all sides by vacant lands

. . . [h]aving such form, slope, and marks as appear by a plat of the same hereunto

annexed[.]” The 1834 plat is very similar in appearance to the modern survey of the

peninsula, which is now measured to contain approximately 1,000 acres.6 Neither the

Shuman grant nor the 1834 plat contain any language dividing the peninsula (apart

from land beyond the southwestern neck by the mainland) between Shuman and any

other party, including the State. It is undisputed that across the Ogeechee River from

the peninsula is land located in what is now Camden County and to the southwest of

the peninsula is land located in Bryan County.

5 See Figure 2, infra. 6 Compare Figure 1 and Figure 2, infra. 4 The State challenged the quiet title petition and later moved for summary

judgment. The State’s main contention was that Shuman’s grant was void on its face

and did not result in NoFree’s ownership of the peninsula because the grant’s

description was insufficient to convey it to Shuman. Additionally, because the

peninsula consisted of marshland, it falls under the Protection of Tidewaters Act. The

Act requires a current landowner of protected property to trace their ownership to a

valid grant from the Crown of England or the State. Among other things, the State

also maintained that the land had been set aside for the citizens of a proposed town of

Georgetown or Hardwicke in 1754. The State contends that the peninsula constituted

commons after a dedication to Hardwicke’s citizens, so the peninsula could not have

been validly granted to Shuman in 1834. NoFree responded to the motion and filed its

own cross-motion for summary judgment.

Per NoFree’s request, the trial court appointed a special master to review the

cross-motions for summary judgment, authorized the special master to hold an

evidentiary hearing if necessary, and directed him to prepare a report and

recommendation for the court. After the special master held an evidentiary hearing,

he issued a report recommending that the trial court grant NoFree’s motion for

5 summary judgment and deny the State’s motion for summary judgment. The special

master found that the Shuman grant and 1834 plat were clear in their combined

description of land, the title chain was sufficiently legible to establish title as passing

to NoFree from the Shuman grant, and the State had failed to rebut NoFree’s

evidence that the petition to quiet title should be granted.

The State objected to the report, and NoFree responded. The trial court heard

additional argument from the parties regarding the special master’s conclusions, the

parties’ motions, and parties’ objections.

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