Woodstock Village v. Fowler

267 S.E.2d 558, 154 Ga. App. 82, 1980 Ga. App. LEXIS 2049
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 5, 1980
Docket59075, 59076
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 267 S.E.2d 558 (Woodstock Village v. Fowler) 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
Woodstock Village v. Fowler, 267 S.E.2d 558, 154 Ga. App. 82, 1980 Ga. App. LEXIS 2049 (Ga. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Birdsong, Judge.

Land purchased price apportionment and abatement. Woodstock Village, a land development partnership composed of Wright, Roberts, Negri, and Woods entered into negotiations with Fowler to purchase land in Cherokee County. Woodstock desired to purchase al75xl75 foot section of land from Fowler that lay at the intersection of State Routes 92 and 5. Woodstock offered Fowler $100,000 for the tract of land. Fowler declined to sell the described tract but countered with an offer to sell the land at the intersection together with several other acres contiguous to the comer tract. Woodstock considered the offer of the larger tract and because of additional needs subsequently decided to buy an even larger tract composed of almost twelve acres with an ultimate purchase price of $244,644.24. There was unrebutted testimony that the smaller corner tract was the "most valuable land in Cherokee County.” At the time of the purchase by Woodstock, there was an approximately fifty-foot right-of-way in the State of Georgia running alongside State Routes 92 and 5 on the land purchased from Fowler by Woodstock. Fowler’s land and the rights-of-way appeared to be separated by a fence. It seems clear and was accepted by the jury that Fowler intended to convey to Woodstock all the land in the corner tract up to the right angle created by the intersection of Routes 92 and 5, and that Woodstock believed they were purchasing right up to the intersection, excluding the rights-of-way. In point of fact, approximately twelve years earlier when the state obtained *83 the rights-of-way for Routes 92 and 5 and specifically at the questioned intersection, Fowler also deeded to the state a triangular portion of his land at the intersection. At a point one hundred feet west of the intér section along Highway 92, a stake was placed. One hundred feet south of the intersection along Highway 5, another stake was placed. These two stakes were joined by a surveyor’s line of approximately 144 feet forming the triangle of about 5,000 square feet. FoWler had conveyed this triangle by warranty deed to the state as a part of the right-of-way. Thus, instead of Fowler conveying to Woodstock the entire tract including the comer formed by the right angle at the intersection of Highways 92 and 5, the comer was mitered by a 5,000 foot triangle which was no longer owned by Fowler; and consequently, because of the defect in the deed to Woodstock, that 5,000 foot triangle was not effectively deeded to Woodstock.

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Woodstock commenced development of the entire tract and placed a shopping center thereon. During the development, *84 Woodstock became aware that it did not have clear title to the 5,000 square foot triangle mitered across the intersection of the two highways. Because of their previous development, Woodstock declined to seek rescission of the contract but sought abatement of the purchase price. Woodstock offered evidence that the partial 175 x 175 foot area at the intersection was reasonably valued at $100,000 with the mitered corner intact, but was worth only $50,000 with the triangle missing. This was computed by their expert witness by assessing the value of the missing triangle at $16,350, together with consequential damages to the original 175 x 175 foot tract sought to be purchased by Woodstock for $33,650. Woodstock sought to offer documentary evidence that in the original sales contract, Fowler was to release "Tract 1” (the original 175 x 175 foot parcel) upon the payment of $100,000 by Woodstock, with three other tracts to be released following smaller designated payments. This evidence was offered to show the valuation placed upon the property (in parcels) by Woodstock as well as Fowler. The trial court excluded from evidence the sales contract and promissory note which show ed the division of the land into four separate parcels for release purposes and tended to place some separate degree of evaluation on each parcel. The rationale of the trial court was that the land was sold by the tract and that apportionment would be de termined, if at all, by taking the total value of the entire tract, allocating a value per acre, and placing a value on the missing triangle in direct ratio to the value of the triangle to the whole tract. Under such formula the missing triangle presumably wouiid have had a value of about $2,600, inasmuch as the missing triangle constituted approximately 12-1/2% (one-eighth) of one acre within the entire 11.781 acre tract. The trial court charged that the correct measure of damages would be derived by applying the formula of measuring the relative value of the tract included within the false boundary (including the triangle) against the tract embraced in the true boundary (excluding the triangle). The difference in the value of the total property with and without the missing triangle could constitute the actual pro rata damages and amount to be apportioned. Inasmuch as Woodstock complained in one count that Fowler had acted with deceit and fraud by selling land that he knew he had already conveyed to another, Woodstock sought punitive damages as well. The jury returned a nonspecific verdict of $4,500 in favor of Woodstock.

Woodstock, in several enumerations of error, complains that the trial court erroneously excluded the evidence of the $100,000 *85 contractual value placed upon "Tract 1”; by limiting the evidence and the jury’s consideration to an improper measure of damages under Code Ann. § 29-202; that the measure of damages was limited to a strict pro rata va lue based upon the per-acre price of the entire tract, rather than the actual value of the smaller, but more valuable, one-eighth of an acre comprising Tract 1; and inferentially excluded any interest on payments made for property purchased but not received. The court denied a motion for new trial upon these grounds and also denied a motion by Fowler for directed verdict and judgment n. o. v. on the grounds that there was no evidence to support a finding that Fowler acted with fraud in the sale of the property. It is the denial of these respective motions that forms the basis for the appeals by Woodstock (No. 59075) and Fowler (No. 59076). Held:

1. Code Ann. § 29-202, upon which the trial court relied in excluding the evidence of value as to a portion of the property as opposed to the whole tract and in charging the jury as to the measure of damages, provides as follows: "Purchaser losing land from defect of title, rights of— If the purchaser loses part of the land from defect of title, he may claim ... a reduction of the price according to the relative value of the land so lost.” The sole question troubling the trial court was the meaning of the words "relative value” In determining the meaning of those words, the trial court relied on McConnell v. White, 91 Ga. App. 92, 96 (85 SE2d 75), wherein that case held: "We have not found where the words 'relative value’ as used in Code § 29-202 have been exactly defined. We conclude, after much concern and deliberation, that the expression means relative value with the purchase price as a base value of the whole, for the reason that, where rescission is not sought, the only remedy is a reduction in purchase price. Any other interpretation might result in the recovery by a purchaser of more than the purchase price, if the land lost was worth more at the time of breach of contract or bond than the whole land originally bargained for. Smith v. Kirkpatrick, 79 Ga.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.E.2d 558, 154 Ga. App. 82, 1980 Ga. App. LEXIS 2049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodstock-village-v-fowler-gactapp-1980.