Windermere Development, Inc. v. Bank of North Ga

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 21, 2012
DocketA12A0602
StatusPublished

This text of Windermere Development, Inc. v. Bank of North Ga (Windermere Development, Inc. v. Bank of North Ga) 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
Windermere Development, Inc. v. Bank of North Ga, (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION ELLINGTON, C. J., BLACKW ELL and DILLARD, 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. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

May 21, 2012

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A0560; A12A0602. BANK OF NORTH GEORGIA v. WINDERMERE DEVELOPMENT, INC., et al.; and vice versa. A12A0561; A12A0603. BANK OF NORTH GEORGIA v. SIMON ROAD DEVELOPMENT, INC., et al.; and vice versa.

E LLINGTON, Chief Judge.

Pursuant to granted applications for interlocutory appeal, the Bank of North

Georgia (“BNG”), appeals from orders of the State Court of Douglas County which,

in two separate but related actions for reimbursement on letters of credit and personal

guaranties, denied the bank’s motions for summary judgment. The defendants in those

suits, Windermere Development, Inc., Simon Road Development, Inc., and guarantors

Robert G. Vansant and Robert C. Belans, Jr., cross-appeal, contending that the trial

court erred in denying their cross-motions for summary judgment. Because these

appeals involve the same facts and questions of law, we have consolidated them. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court’s orders denying summary judgments

to BNG and reverse the court’s orders denying summary judgments to the cross-

appellants.

The same standard of review applies to both of these appeals and cross-appeals.

Summary judgment is appropriate if the pleadings and the undisputed evidence show

that there exists no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the moving party is

entitled to judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). On appeal from the

grant or denial of summary judgment, the appellate courts conduct a de novo review,

construing all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving

party. Alston & Bird LLP v. Mellon Ventures II, L.P., 307 Ga. App. 640 (706 SE2d

652) (2010). So viewed, the record shows as follows.

Both Simon Road Development, Inc. (“Simon Road”) and Windermere

Development, Inc. (“Windermere”) secured loans from Citizens & Merchants State

Bank (“Citizens”), BNG’s predecessor-in-interest, to acquire and to develop

residential subdivisions in Douglas County near the Windermere Golf Club. The

subdivisions are located about three miles from each other. In 2004, Windermere and

Windermere Golf Club executed two promissory notes and a deed to secure debt

secured by property in Douglas County to develop the Bear Creek Subdivision, which

2 is adjacent to the golf course. The legal description of the secured property, attached

to the deed to secure debt as “Exhibit A,” included residential, golf course, and golf

club tracts in Land Lots 4, 5, and 32 of the 1st District, 5th Section, and Land Lots 1

and 32 of the 2nd District, 5th Section of Douglas County. In 2006, in order to

acquire, to hold, and to develop the Kings Bridge Subdivision, Simon Road executed

two promissory notes and a deed to secure debt secured by tracts in Land Lots 75, 86,

and 87 of the 1st District, 5th Section, of Douglas County.

In February 2007, Windermere Golf Club executed a new deed to secure debt

covering the obligations of both Windermere and Simon Road, pledging as additional

security for Simon Road the same golf club and course properties that secured, in part,

the first note executed by W indermere and Windermere Golf Club in 2004. The 2007

deed to secure debt provided:

That, WHEREAS, Grantor has executed this Deed to secure the obligations of WINDERMERE DEVELOPMENT, INC., SIMON ROAD DEVELOPMENT, INC., and such other entities as Grantor may request from time to time (“Borrowers”), or any of them, in favor of Grantee evidenced by one or more Letters of Credit issued to Grantee in favor of Borrowers, from time to time, together with any extensions or renewals thereof, and replacements therefore (such Letters of Credit are collectively referred to in this Deed as the “Notes”). All Notes shall

3 mature in terms less than three years from the date of execution, and shall not at any time exceed the aggregate sum of $1,755,000.00.

All of the aforementioned deeds to secure debt contained “open-end” or

“dragnet” clauses that expressly provided that

[this] instrument is . . . made and intended to secure the payment of the indebtedness of Grantor to Grantee evidenced by the Note . . ., together with any and all other indebtedness now owing or which may hereafter be owing by Grantor to Grantee, however . . . incurred, . . . and all renewal or renewals, extension or extensions, and modification or modifications and consolidation or consolidations of the Note or other indebtedness, either in whole or in part[.] (emphasis added.) (emphasis supplied.)

In March 2007, Vansant and Belans executed agreements in which they

guaranteed Windermere’s and Simon Road’s payment and performance under the

notes and all other indebtedness owed to Citizens. Belans was the president of both

Windermere and Simon Road and a member of Windermere Gold Club, LLC. Vansant

was a principal investor and secretary in both Windermere and Simon Road and

served as the project manager for both subdivisions, handling construction for both

projects from the same office.

4 In July 2007, Simon Road executed an irrevocable letter of credit application

and reimbursement agreement, pursuant to which Citizens issued to Simon Road an

irrevocable letter of credit in an amount not to exceed $78,750, naming the Douglas

County Board of Commissioners (the “Board”) as the beneficiary. Simon Road also

obtained from the bank a second letter of credit, also benefitting the Board, in an

amount not to exceed $176,250. Both letters of credit served as maintenance bonds

for the county’s development of the Kings Bridge subdivision infrastructure. In July

2008, Windermere also obtained two letters of credit from Citizens, for $229,212 and

$464,520, respectively. Both of Windermere’s letters of credit were likewise bonds

for the county’s development of the infrastructure of the Bear Creek subdivision.

Windermere’s and Simon Road’s reimbursement obligations to the bank

pursuant to the letters of credit were secured by the golf course and club properties

identified in the 2007 deed to secure debt. Each letter of credit contained identical

cross-default provisions, each listing as a default event the borrower’s “failure to make

timely payment of any sum required to be paid hereunder, or to perform and fully

satisfy any other covenant or obligation of Customer to Lender set forth herein or in

the Separate Agreement or any related instrument[.]” Each letter of credit also

provided that, upon default, the lender could accelerate the amount due under the

5 reimbursement obligation, as well as “any other agreement between the parties

hereto[.]”

In May 2009, Simon Road and Windermere defaulted on their promissory

notes, and, on June 2, 2009, BNG executed its power of sale under Simon Road’s

2006 and Windermere’s 2007 security deeds, foreclosing on all of those tracts of land

securing the acquisition and development notes as well as the letters of credit. The

deeds were delivered and recorded. BNG did not seek judicial confirmation of the

foreclosure sales.

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