Hbc2018, LLC v. Paulding County School District ( 2020 )


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  •                                 FIRST DIVISION
    BARNES, P. J.,
    GOBEIL and PIPKIN, 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
    DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS
    COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN
    THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.
    December 21, 2020
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A20A1993. HBC2018, LLC v. PAULDING COUNTY SCHOOL
    DISTRICT.
    PIPKIN, Judge.
    Georgia Heritage Bank (“the Bank”) filed a complaint alleging, among other
    things, a claim for inverse condemnation against the Paulding County School District
    (“the District”).1 The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the District on
    this claim. The Bank appeals this ruling. As the trial court’s order is sound, we affirm.
    Summary judgment is proper if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if
    any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that
    the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Thus, to
    prevail on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must
    1
    After suit was filed, HBC2018, LLC purchased the debt from Georgia
    Heritage Bank and was substituted as plaintiff. For ease of reading, we refer simply
    to the Bank.
    demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact, so that the
    party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. When reviewing the
    grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment, this court conducts
    a de novo review of the law and the evidence.
    (Footnotes and punctuation omitted). Solid Equities, Inc. v. City of Atlanta, 
    308 Ga. App. 895
    , 895 (710 SE2d 165) (2011).
    Here, the relevant facts are largely undisputed. In February 2008, the Paulding
    County School Board (“the Board”) voted to allow the construction of a field house
    at East Paulding High School (the “School”). The Board allocated $450,000 of
    taxpayer funds for the project, and Board minutes reflect an understanding that the
    remainder of the $900,000 cost would be paid by private donations. A contract for
    construction was awarded to LTP Construction Company.
    Lee Paris and Ben Paris – principals of LTP Construction – were also officers
    of the East Paulding High School Booster Club (the “Booster Club”). Lee Paris, in
    his capacity as the president of the Booster Club, obtained a $450,000 loan from the
    Bank, which was used to complete the construction of the field house. The collateral
    for the loan was listed as the “accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, rents and
    2
    leases now owned or hereafter acquired.”2 Lee and Ben Paris served as guarantors on
    the loan.3 Following its construction, the School used the field house both for sports
    teams and classes.
    From the outset, the Booster Club had difficulty meeting its loan obligations.
    In 2010, over $440,000 of the debt was restructured to require a yearly principal
    payment of $10,000 plus interest for four years followed by a balloon payment
    estimated to be over $390,000. Lee Paris signed the agreement in his capacity as
    president of the Booster Club.
    In 2013, Amanda Harmon – with the encouragement of the Parises – took over
    as Booster Club president. At the time, she was unaware of the loan obligation, which
    was not current. The balloon payment came due in 2014, and Harmon was pressured
    to sign a new loan agreement in her capacity as Booster Club president. Harmon met
    with various School officials to discuss repayment of the loan. Although the School
    2
    In actuality, it appears the booster club had few resources.
    3
    Despite the integral part the Parises played in obtaining the loan, they were
    not deposed, and the record contains no information regarding their decision-making
    process in obtaining the loan, the proceeds of which were paid to their construction
    company. During oral argument, it was suggested that the Parises built the field house
    at cost, but there appears to be nothing in the record to support this suggestion. After
    completion of the field house, the Bank apparently released the Parises from their
    personal guaranties, and they are not parties to this lawsuit.
    3
    refused to take over the loan, the principal agreed to use discretionary funds to pay
    a portion of the obligation.
    Notwithstanding the School’s assistance, the Booster Club still could not meet
    its loan obligations. Booster Club membership dropped off, and the remaining
    members resented having to repay the loan. When Harmon’s tenure as Booster Club
    president ended, no one was willing to succeed her, and the club ceased functioning.4
    In late 2016, Board members began to question the use of School funds to
    repay a loan it was not legally obligated to repay. In early 2017, the Board voted to
    disallow use of the School’s discretionary funds to repay the loan.
    The Bank filed suit against the District, alleging a claim for inverse
    condemnation.5 According to the Bank, the School’s continued use of the property
    without payment of the debt constitutes an unconstitutional taking. The parties filed
    cross-motions for summary judgment, and the trial court granted summary judgment
    4
    A new parent group was created called the Touchdown Club, which
    performed some of the same fund-raising activities as the Booster Club. There is no
    suggestion that this new organization is liable for the debt.
    5
    The Bank also sued the Booster Club, which failed to answer. The trial court
    entered default judgment against the Booster Club.
    4
    in favor of the District, finding no taking as a matter of law. The Bank appeals this
    ruling.
    As a threshold matter, we note that the Bank appears to conflate an inverse
    condemnation claim with a takings claim. See City of Tybee Island, Ga. v. Live Oak
    Group, 
    324 Ga. App. 476
    , 479 (751 SE2d 123) (2013) (concluding that appellants
    had failed to raise an inverse condemnation claim and declining to address whether
    a constitutional taking claim had been raised). An inverse condemnation claim
    ordinarily involves affirmative government action that causes a nuisance or a trespass,
    which diminishes the value of private property. See 
    Id.
     (no inverse condemnation
    claim where there was no affirmative act by the City). Here, there is no suggestion
    that the District caused a nuisance or trespass; it thus appears the complaint, in
    substance, alleges an unconstitutional taking claim, and we construe it as such. See
    Forest City Gun Club v. Chatham County, 
    280 Ga. App. 219
    , 220 (633 SE2d 623)
    (2006) (courts construe pleadings according to their substance and function rather
    than by nomenclature).
    “Basic principles of constitutional law require that when property is taken for
    a public purpose by any governmental entity, including a county (or a subdivision or
    agency thereof), fair and adequate compensation must be paid to the owner of the
    5
    property.” Brown v. Penland Const. Co., 
    276 Ga. App. 522
    , 524 (1) (623 SE2d 717)
    (2005), reversed on other grounds, 
    281 Ga. 625
     (641 SE2d 522) (2007). Such “[a]n
    unconstitutional taking claim requires the taking of a valid property interest.” Layer
    v. Barrow County, 
    297 Ga. 871
    , 873 (2) (778 SE2d 156) (2015). Here, however, it is
    undisputed that the Bank has no property interest in the field house. Instead, the Bank
    contends it has “a cognizable property interest in being repaid for the loan used to
    construct the field house.” Assuming that the Bank’s interest in repayment is a
    cognizable interest, the Bank has pointed to no evidence establishing that the
    School’s use of the field house has frustrated the Bank’s right to seek repayment of
    the debt; indeed, the Bank has secured a default judgment against the obligor on the
    loan and has released the guarantors. Moreover, the uncontradicted evidence
    establishes that the District was not a party to the loan agreement and is under no
    legal obligation to repay the Bank. See, e. g., Willard v. Stewart Title Guar. Co., 
    264 Ga. 555
    , 555 (448 SE2d 696) (1994) (partner who had not signed loan was not liable
    for repayment even though loan proceeds benefitted partnership). It is of no
    consequence that the Bank expected the School to repay the loan; a takings claim
    requires that the Bank have a legitimate claim of entitlement to repayment. See
    6
    Abramyan v. State of Georgia, 
    301 Ga. 308
    , 310 (800 SE2d 366) (2017). Under these
    circumstances, the Bank is unable to sustain a takings claim against the District.
    To avoid this result, the Bank points to Brown v. Penland Construction Co.,
    
    supra.
     In that case, a school’s baseball coach arranged for a contractor to install a
    prefabricated building on high school property for use by the school. The coach
    represented to the contractor that the booster club would pay for the construction.
    After completing the installation, the contractor sued the school board, the booster
    club, and the baseball coach. A jury found that no oral contract existed, but it found
    that the contractor was entitled to $150,000 in quantum meruit. On appeal, this Court
    found that sovereign immunity barred a recovery in quantum meruit. Rather than
    reaching the issue of the contractor’s entitlement to restitution, this Court found that
    the contractor had a property interest in the building it erected and that the school
    district had taken use of that building; thus, the contractor was entitled to enforce his
    constitutional right to compensation for the taking. See Brown, 276 Ga. App. at 525
    (1).
    Unlike in Brown, the Bank has no property interest in the building. The Bank
    did not provide the materials and expend the labor for the construction of the field
    house. Rather, the Bank issued a loan to the Booster Club, which assumed
    7
    responsibility for repayment of the loan. The fact that the Booster Club donated the
    proceeds of the loan for the construction of the field house does not render the
    District liable on the loan. See, e. g., Walker v. Gwinnett Hosp. System, 
    263 Ga. App. 554
    , 557 (1) (588 SE2d 441) (2003) (holding that the written terms of the loan
    agreement governed repayment obligations; the mere fact that a party had a different
    expectation did not alter the express terms of the agreement).
    Finally, the Bank argues that an issue of fact exists as to whether the Board’s
    decision to disallow loan payments to the Bank constitutes a taking. According to the
    minutes from the Board meeting, the Board voted
    to stop and disallow any further funds or payments, cash or in kind, to
    [the Bank] for the purpose of servicing or retiring the loan contract
    between [the Bank] and [the booster club], by this board or any entity
    under the direction or control of Paulding County School Board policy,
    practices, or procedures including but not limited to [the School],
    whether those payments be direct or indirect [through] outside or third
    party organizations, or whether such disallowed payments would be
    issued by any local funds held by [the School] or under the control of
    the [School’s] administration.
    Again, however, neither the School nor the Board was liable for repayment of the
    loan. The fact that the School made gratuitous payments did not create a legal
    8
    obligation on the part of the School. See, e. g., Trust Co. of Columbus v.
    Refrigeration Supplies, 
    241 Ga. 406
    , 407 (246 SE2d 282) (1978) (payment by
    property owner to materialman was gratuitous where there was no privity of contract);
    Gosnell v. Waldrip, 
    158 Ga. App. 685
    , 686 (3) (282 SE2d 168) (1981) (payments
    made by third party did not create a new contract to repay debt).
    Because the Bank has shown neither a valid property interest nor a right to
    repayment from the District, the trial court properly granted summary judgment.
    Judgment affirmed. Barnes, P. J., and Gobeil, J., concur.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A20A1993

Filed Date: 12/23/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/23/2020