FIFTH DIVISION
RICKMAN, C. J.,
MCFADDEN, P. J., and SENIOR APPELLATE JUDGE PHIPPS
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
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March 8, 2022
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A21A1366. GRIGGS v. MILLER et al.
MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.
Joyce Griggs appeals from the trial court’s grant of a declaratory judgment to
Gregory Miller, who is acting in his capacities as the executor of the estate of John
Miller and as the trustee for Dorothy Miller (collectively, “Miller”). In the order on
appeal, the trial court held that Miller could “proceed with foreclosure proceedings
pursuant to the terms of the [s]ecurity [d]eed” in which Griggs conveyed title of real
property to John Miller as security for an indebtedness. Griggs argues that this ruling
was error because the title conveyed to Miller by the security deed had reverted back
to Griggs under OCGA § 44-14-80. That statute provides for “‘an automatic reverter
of title to land described in a security deed after seven years from the maturity date
of the debt secured thereby or 20 years if the parties so expressly agree in writing in
the security deed.’” Matson v. Bayview Loan Servicing, 339 Ga. App. 890, 891 (1)
(795 SE2d 195) (2016) (quoting 3 Daniel F. Hinkel, Pindar’s Ga. Real Estate Law &
Procedure § 21.67 (7th ed. 2015)). We agree that title has reverted back to Griggs. So
we reverse the order declaring that Miller may foreclose on the property.
1. Facts and procedural history.
The order on appeal grants Miller summary judgment on his declaratory
judgment claim. “Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We review the
grant of summary judgment de novo, construing the evidence in favor of the
nonmovant.” Patel v. Columbia Nat. Ins. Co., 315 Ga. App. 877 (729 SE2d 35)
(2012) (citations omitted).
The parties do not dispute the dispositive facts.1 On April 20, 2006, Griggs
executed a security deed in favor of John Miller, conveying to him title to land as
security for an indebtedness.
1
For this reason we are not persuaded by Miller’s argument that we must
affirm because Griggs did not designate the oral argument hearing transcript for
transmission on appeal. See generally Sapp v. Canal Ins. Co., 288 Ga. 681, 686 (3)
(706 SE2d 644) (2011) (rejecting position “that a hearing transcript is always
necessary to resolve appeals arising from a trial court’s determination on summary
judgment”).
2
The security deed contained an open-end or dragnet clause — “a clause in a
security deed that provides that the deed ‘shall also secure any other debt or
obligation that may be or become owing by the mortgagor or grantor.’ OCGA § 44-
14-1 (b).” Bell v. Freeport Title & Guar., 355 Ga. App. 94, 100 (2) (b) n. 5 (842 SE2d
565) (2020) (punctuation omitted). That clause provided:
SECURED INDEBTEDNESS; FUTURE ADVANCES. This mortgage
shall secure (a) the initial indebtedness of Mortgagor (and each of them,
if more than one) to Mortgagee, as evidenced by a negotiable
Promissory Note of even date herewith, executed by Mortgagor and
payable to Mortgagee, in the amount specified above, (b) any future
advances made by Mortgagee to Mortgagor (or any of them, if more
than one), and (c) all other indebtedness of Mortgagor (and each of
them, if more than one) to Mortgagee, however and wherever incurred
or evidenced, whether primary, secondary, direct, indirect, absolute,
contingent, sole, joint or several, due or to become due, or which may
be hereafter contracted or acquired, whether arising in the ordinary
course of business or otherwise. The total amount of indebtedness
secured hereby may decrease or increase from time to time, to the total
amount due Grantee, including any advances for taxes, insurance, levies,
maintenance, repair, protection and preservation of the mortgaged
property, with all interest thereon, as well as additional cash advanced
to Grantor, and interest thereupon.
It further provided:
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This conveyance is also intended to secure not only said debt and
interest, and any renewal thereof, in whole or in part (to be made solely
at the option of said grantee(s)[)], but shall also secure all obligations
and covenants herein set out and all sums due or hereafter to become
due hereunder, AND ALSO any other indebtedness or liability now
owing or hereafter created by the grantor(s) to the grantee(s) at any time
between the date of this deed and the cancellation of record or
foreclosure hereof in any amount or amounts unlimited and this security
shall be effective to cover all future indebtedness, notwithstanding the
sale, mortgage or encumbrance by the grantor(s) of his equity in said
property.
The deed set a fixed maturity date for the loan twelve months later on April 20,
2007. The parties later renewed the loan for an additional twelve months with a fixed
maturity date of April 20, 2008. It appears from the record (and the parties do not
dispute) that this renewal was not recorded until 2018.
Griggs failed to pay off the indebtedness by the due date, and in October 2008
John Miller initiated a foreclosure proceeding. He withdrew that proceeding after
Griggs informed him that she was on active military duty. See generally 50 USC §
3953 (imposing limits on actions to enforce obligations “secured by a mortgage, trust
deed, or other security in the nature of a mortgage” during and in the year following
a servicemember’s period of military service).
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Griggs’s active military duty ended in September 2013. Later that year Miller
began a second foreclosure proceeding but withdrew it so that the parties could work
out a payment plan. Finally, on November 15, 2017, Miller initiated a third
foreclosure proceeding.
Griggs then filed a petition to quiet title to the property, asserting that, pursuant
to OCGA § 44-14-80, title to the property had reverted to her in 2015, seven years
after the maturity date of the renewed loan. Miller filed a counterclaim seeking,
among other things, a declaratory judgment that he had a right to foreclose on the
property. He filed a motion for summary judgment on the declaratory judgment claim,
arguing that the statutory reversionary period — whether seven or twenty years —
had been tolled.
The trial court granted Miller summary judgment on the declaratory judgment
claim, holding alternatively that the applicable reversionary period was twenty years
and that, even if it was seven years, the reversionary period was tolled. This appeal
followed. As detailed below, we conclude that the applicable reversionary period was
seven years and that this period was not tolled. Consequently, the title to the property
reverted back to Griggs and Miller cannot foreclose upon the property.
2. The applicable reversionary period was seven years.
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Griggs’s argument that Miller no longer has title to the property rests on OCGA
§ 44-14-80, which, as stated above, provides for the automatic reversion of title to
land, as a matter of law, under certain circumstances. See Vineville Capital Group v.
McCook, 329 Ga. App. 790 (766 SE2d 156) (2014) (reversion of title under OCGA
§ 44-14-80 occurs as a matter of law). Under OCGA § 44-14-80,
Georgia’s default reversion[ary] period for real property conveyed to
secure a debt is seven years from the debt’s maturity date unless “the
parties by affirmative statement contained in the record of the
conveyance intend to establish a perpetual or indefinite security interest
in the real property conveyed to secure a debt or debts.” OCGA § 44-14-
80 (a) (1). Therefore, under the plain language of this statute, any intent
to create a perpetual and indefinite security interest must appear by an
affirmative statement in the deed.
Bell, 355 Ga. App. at 99 (2) (b) (citation and punctuation omitted; emphasis in
original).
Miller argues that the security deed’s open-end or dragnet clause contained
such an affirmative statement. But we have held that where, as here, a security deed
and any renewals contain a fixed maturity date, an open-end or dragnet clause alone
is not an affirmative statement of the parties’ intent to create a perpetual or indefinite
security interest. See Bell, 355 Ga. App. at 100 (2) (b) (“this [c]ourt has been clear
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that the existence of an open-end clause in conjunction with a fixed maturity date, by
itself, does not constitute an affirmative statement of a perpetual or indefinite security
interest that would dictate the Code’s 20-year reversion period”); Mike’s Furniture
Barn v. Smith, 342 Ga. App. 558, 561-563 (2) (803 SE2d 800) (2017) (holding that
“an open-end clause may constitute an affirmative statement of a perpetual or
indefinite security interest that would create the 20-year reversionary period under
OCGA § 44-14-80[, b]ut we have never held that it must[,]” and concluding that a
deed with an open-end clause and a fixed maturity date lacked the necessary
affirmative statement of intent to create a perpetual or indefinite security interest)
(emphasis in original).
Miller, however, argues that the open-end clause in this case did constitute
such an affirmative statement of intent because it is akin to the revolving line of credit
that we held demonstrated the parties’ intent to establish a perpetual or indefinite
security interest in Stearns Bank v. Mullins, 333 Ga. App. 369 (776 SE2d 485)
(2015). But the security deed in Stearns Bank was materially different from the
security deed in this case.
In Stearns Bank, the security deed showed on its face that the parties intended
to create a revolving line of credit. Stearns Bank, 333 Ga. App. at 488. A “[r]evolving
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loan account” is a statutorily defined term, see OCGA § 44-14-3 (a) (6), and we
explained in Stearns Bank that, under such an arrangement,
the debtor must do more than simply pay the amount due in order to be
entitled to have an associated security instrument canceled of record.
Rather, in the case of a revolving loan account, the debt shall be
considered to be “paid in full” only when the entire indebtedness
including accrued finance charges has been paid and the lender or
debtor has notified the other party to the agreement in writing that he
or she wishes to terminate the agreement pursuant to its terms.
Stearns Bank, 333 Ga. App. at 372 (1) (citations omitted; emphasis in original). We
noted that “[t]his character of revolving debt [was] reflected in the express provision
in the security deed at issue in [that] case that, even if [the debtor] reduced the debt
‘to a zero balance,’ the security deed would remain in effect ‘until released.’” Id.
By contrast, the security deed in this case did not require that Griggs notify
Miller of her desire to terminate the agreement before her debt would be considered
“paid in full.” Nor did the security deed provide that it would remain in effect until
released, even if Griggs reduced the debt to a zero balance. To the contrary, the
security deed in this case provided that, “[u]pon the payment of the indebtedness
secured hereby and the performance of all of the covenants and provisions of this
instrument by [Griggs, Miller] will reconvey said property to [Griggs.]” (Emphasis
8
supplied.) And it provided that “[t]he payment in full of the loan amount in this
[s]ecurity deed will also satisfy and release [property in another county also used to
secure the indebtedness and subject to a separate security deed]” (emphasis supplied),
which implies that, unlike in Stearns Bank, payment in full constituted a “release” of
the security interest.
This is consistent with law providing that, generally, a security deed is released
when the indebtedness is paid in full, notwithstanding the presence of an open-end
or dragnet clause in the deed. See Northwest Carpets v. First Nat. Bank, 280 Ga. 535,
537-538 (1) (630 SE2d 407) (2006) (an open-end or dragnet clause in a security deed
is “effective only so long as there exists indebtedness between the grantor and the
grantee” and “if there was not a valid renewal or extension of the note in place [when
the grantor paid off the loan], then satisfaction of the debt would release the security
deed”; but contrasting “a security deed given in connection with an ongoing line of
credit[,] in which the security deed’s ‘dragnet’ clause expressly provided that total
repayment of the original debt would not operate to extinguish the deed to secure
debt”).
The security deed’s reference to being “cancell[ed] of record” does not mean
that the deed remains in effect even after the indebtedness is paid in full, as Miller
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asserts. Once the debt was paid in full Miller had a statutory duty to cancel the deed
of record. See OCGA § 44-14-3 (b) (2) (the grantee must arrange for a security deed
to be cancelled of record within 60 days after it is paid in full).
Because the security deed in this case does not establish a revolving loan
account, our decision in Stearns Bank is inapposite. See Bell, 355 Ga. App. at 100 (2)
(b). Instead, “[g]iven the fixed maturity date in the [d]eed, with a loan for a sum
certain rather than a revolving line of credit, we conclude that the [d]eed lacks an
affirmative statement of intent to create a perpetual and indefinite security in interest
in the property.” Mike’s Furniture Barn, 342 Ga. App. at 563 (2). See also Bell, 355
Ga. App. at 100 (2) (b). So, under OCGA § 44-14-80 (a) (1), the seven-year
reversionary period applies.
3. The reversionary period was not tolled.
OCGA § 44-14-80 (a) (3) provides “that foreclosure by an action or by the
exercise of power of sale, if started prior to reversion of title, shall prevent the
reversion if the foreclosure is completed without delay chargeable to the grantee or
the grantee’s heirs, personal representatives, successors, or assigns.” (Emphasis
supplied.) By its terms, this provision does not apply here, because it is undisputed
that the foreclosure at issue was not started prior to the running of the seven-year
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reversionary period. Miller withdrew the two foreclosure proceedings that he had
begun before the running of the reversionary period.
OCGA § 44-14-80 contains no other language that prevents reversion of title
as a matter of law at the expiration of the applicable time period. Nevertheless, the
trial court held and Miller argues that the reversionary period was tolled. We
disagree.
In this case, the trial court held that the foreclosure proceedings initiated (and
then withdrawn) by Miller in 2008 and 2013 tolled the reversionary period. In support
of this holding, the trial court relied on an unpublished decision of the Northern
District of Georgia. That decision, Lackey v Bank of America, Case No. 1:16-cv-
1732-MHC, 2017 U. S. Dist. LEXIS 161713 (N. D. Ga. 2017), held that the
reversionary period contained in OCGA § 44-14-80 (a) is a “statute of limitations”
subject to tolling under OCGA § 44-14-85 (a). Id. at *12 (IV).
But the reversionary period contained in OCGA § 44-14-80 (a) is not a
limitations period. As our Supreme Court has explained, a limitations period is “a
statutory period after which a lawsuit or prosecution cannot be brought in court.”
Pub. Safety v. Ragsdale, 308 Ga. 210, 211 (839 SE2d 541) (2020) (citation and
punctuation omitted). Our Supreme Court has “described a statute of limitation as a
11
rule limiting the time in which a party may bring an action for a right which has
already accrued.” Id. at 213 (citation and punctuation omitted).
The reversionary period in OCGA § 44-14-80 (a) performs a different function
than a statute of limitation: it establishes a time period after which “title to real
property conveyed by a security deed that has not been cancelled or foreclosed upon
. . . reverts to the grantor as a matter of law.” Vineville Capital Group, 329 Ga. App.
at 790. Because the reversionary period is not a statute of limitation, statutory tolling
provisions applicable to statutes of limitation, such as the tolling provisions in OCGA
§ 44-14-85 (a), do not toll the reversionary period. Cf. Ragsdale, 308 Ga. at 212-213
(because a statutory ante litem notice performs a different function than a statute of
limitation, the statutory tolling provisions applicable to statutes of limitation do not
toll the ante litem notice period).
For the same reason, Miller’s argument that the federal Servicemember’s Civil
Relief Act tolls the reversionary period also fails. The section of that law cited by
Miller, by its terms, provides for the tolling of statutes of limitation during military
service. See 50 USC § 3936 (a). As our Supreme Court held in addressing a
predecessor statute, it “merely tolls all statutes of limitation ‘for the bringing of any
action or proceeding in any court.’ It does not toll a statute that provides for the
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automatic reverter of title to land.” Newman v. Newman, 234 Ga. 297, 299 (216 SE2d
79) (1975).
We also are unpersuaded by Miller’s argument that it would be “manifestly
unjust” not to toll the reversionary period during the period of Griggs’s military
service because the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act “effectively barred” foreclosure
actions during that period. While the Act generally prevents foreclosures “made
during, or within one year after, the period of [a] servicemember’s military service[,]”
50 USC § 3953 (c), it permits such foreclosures upon court order. 50 USC § 3953 (c)
(1). So lenders in Miller’s position are not left without legal recourse.
4. Effect of the seven-year reversionary period in this case.
Because the seven-year reversionary period applies to this case and was not
tolled, title to the property reverted to Griggs “at the expiration of seven years from
the maturity of the debt[.]” OCGA § 44-14-80 (a) (1). The recorded security deed
established a maturity date of April 20, 2007. Because the renewal providing for a
one-year extension of the maturity date apparently was not recorded, title to the
property reverted to Griggs seven years after that original maturity date, see Bell, 355
Ga. App. at 99 (2) (a), which was before Miller initiated the 2017 foreclosure
proceeding that is currently pending. (Title also would have reverted before Miller
13
initiated the 2017 foreclosure proceeding if the seven-year period was calculated from
the April 20, 2008 maturity date provided for in the renewal.)
After title reverts to a grantor, “[n]o action to foreclose and no action to recover
property under a conveyance of real property to secure debt shall be commenced and
no power contained in or conferred by a conveyance of real property to secure debt
shall be exercised[.]” OCGA § 44-14-83. Consequently, the trial court erred in
holding that Miller could proceed with foreclosure proceedings.
Judgment reversed. Rickman, C. J., and Senior Appellate Judge Herbert E.
Phipps concur.
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