WILLIAM HAIRSTON v. SADIE T. MONTGOMERY

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 1, 2024
DocketA24A1055
StatusPublished

This text of WILLIAM HAIRSTON v. SADIE T. MONTGOMERY (WILLIAM HAIRSTON v. SADIE T. MONTGOMERY) 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
WILLIAM HAIRSTON v. SADIE T. MONTGOMERY, (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 A24A0691. BRIMAR ENTERPRISES, LLC v. MONTGOMERY et al. A24A1055. HAIRSTON v. MONTGOMERY et al.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

These appeals arise from tort and contract claims brought by Sadie and Davis

Montgomery against Brimar Enterprises, LLC (“Brimar”), and its sole member,

William Hairston (collectively, “the Defendants”), relating to the Defendants’

involvement in refinancing the Montgomerys’ home, which was pending foreclosure.

The trial court entered a default judgment against Brimar and later granted summary

judgment against Hairston. In Case No. A24A0691, Brimar appeals from the default

judgment, and in Case No. A24A1055, Hairston appeals from the grant of summary judgment.1 For the reasons that follow, we affirm in both cases.

The record reflects that the Montgomerys are an elderly2 couple who have lived

at their home in Powder Springs, Georgia, since 1997. In August 2019, the

Montgomerys had fallen behind on their mortgage3 and were facing foreclosure.

Having seen the Montgomerys’ home in the foreclosure listings, Hairston contacted

them and offered to help reinstate their mortgage. Hairston told the Montgomerys

that he lived one mile away, that he was a Christian, and that he helped people in the

Montgomerys’ situation. The Montgomerys asked Hairston whether, in accepting his

assistance, they would maintain title to their home in order to leave it to their children,

and Hairston assured them that they would.

After agreeing to accept Hairston’s assistance, the Montgomerys were directed

by Hairston to sign documents that they believed to comprise a mortgage

reinstatement loan.4 The documents that the Montgomerys signed consisted of a

promissory note purportedly made between the Montgomerys and Hairston d/b/a

1 Because both cases are based on the same underlying transaction and trial court proceedings, we have consolidated the appeals. 2 At the time of the transaction, the Montgomerys were both 76 years old. 3 The Montgomerys’ mortgage was serviced by Selene Finance. 4 At the time of the transaction, the reinstatement amount for the Montgomerys’ mortgage was $9,866.81. 2 Brimar and one of two versions of a quitclaim deed purporting to convey the

Montgomerys’ home to Hairston d/b/a Brimar.5 The Montgomerys also received a

loan agreement purportedly made between the Montgomerys as borrowers and

Hairston d/b/a Brimar as lender. The loan agreement contained in the record does not

bear the Montgomerys’ signatures.

The promissory note identifies the Montgomerys as owners of the subject

property, but it does not set forth any specific loan amount, interest rate, installment

amount, or payment period. Instead, the document states that the Montgomerys are

to pay Brimar “the dollar amount equal to the amount of the proceeds from the sale”

of the subject property. No sale of the property actually occurred, and there were no

such proceeds.6

The loan agreement states that the Defendants were to loan the Montgomerys

$165,000 to be repaid at 6.25 percent interest for a 30-year term, with monthly

5 One version of the quitclaim deed was unrecorded and provided to the Montgomerys, and the other was recorded but not provided to the Montgomerys. The unrecorded version bears Hairston’s signature as the grantor. The recorded version contains the Montgomerys’ signatures as the grantors. 6 A transfer tax form that the Defendants filed in connection with the purported transfer of the property lists the Montgomerys as the sellers, lists Hairston d/b/a Brimar as the buyer, indicates that August 23, 2019, was the date of sale, and reflects that the consideration received by the sellers was $0. 3 installments of $992.50 starting September 1, 2019, and ending August 1, 2049. The

document identifies the Montgomerys’ home as security and references the purchase

of the home from the Montgomerys by the Defendants, stating that the Defendants

would retain title to the home until the loan was repaid in full, at which point the

Defendants would return title to the Montgomerys. The document further states that

in the event of default, the Defendants could demand all outstanding principal and

interest, and if the Montgomerys failed to satisfy such demand within ten days, the

Defendants would be entitled to repossess the home. The Defendants never gave the

Montgomerys $165,000, nor did they pay off the Montgomerys’ existing mortgage

with such an amount.

The first page of the unrecorded quitclaim deed provided to the Montgomerys

is identical to the first page of the recorded quitclaim deed, aside from the recordation

file stamp. In both versions, the stated effect of the document is to convey title of the

Montgomerys’ home to the Defendants for $1 in consideration. Hairston initially

signed the second page of the unrecorded quitclaim deed as grantor, but after realizing

this, he directed the Montgomerys to sign as grantors on the second page of the

quitclaim deed that was recorded.

The Montgomerys gave Hairston third-party authorization to make payments

4 on their behalf to their mortgage servicer, and Brimar paid $9,866.81 to reinstate their

mortgage, proof of which was provided to the Montgomerys. The Montgomerys

began making monthly payments of $992.50 to Hairston in September 2019. At that

time, the monthly installment amount under the Montgomerys’ existing mortgage was

$673.24.7 From September 2019 to May 2021, the Montgomerys paid Hairston

$992.50 monthly with the understanding that part of each payment would cover their

existing mortgage installments, while the rest would go towards repayment of the

$9,866.81 mortgage reinstatement loan. Meanwhile, the Montgomerys continued to

live in their home.

In October 2019, the Defendants received a notice indicating that inoperable

and/or unregistered vehicles were present at the subject property, which Hairston

forwarded to the Montgomerys. The notice indicated that the property and/or the

Defendants were potentially in violation of the county code but did not reference the

Montgomerys. Additionally, prior to 2020, tax bills for the property had been sent to

the Montgomerys and included senior homestead exemptions, but starting in 2020,

the bills were sent to the Defendants and no longer reflected these exemptions. In

April 2021, the Montgomerys received a notice from their mortgage servicer

7 In June 2020, this amount changed to $616.13. 5 indicating that their existing monthly mortgage payments would increase from $616.13

to $844.29 effective June 2021. The Montgomerys learned that this increase was due

to the removal of their senior homestead exemptions when the Defendants’ recorded

the quitclaim deed, which alerted them that title to their home was at issue.

In May or June 2021, Hairston notified the Montgomerys that, due to the

increase in their existing monthly mortgage payments, their monthly payments to the

Defendants would increase to $1,220.66.8 Hairston told the Montgomerys that the

Defendants owned the Montgomerys’ home and that unless they paid the increased

monthly amount, Hairston would sell the property and force the Montgomerys to find

another place to live.

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