Filed: Feb. 04, 2011
Latest Update: Feb. 04, 2011
Summary: DILLARD, Judge. This appeal follows a nonjudicial foreclosure sale of property consisting of four houses and one developed lot. Appellee, KeyBank National Association, conducted the sale in August 2009 after appellants, Atreus Communities of America, LLC et al. (collectively referred to as "Atreus"), 1 defaulted on payment of a nearly $66,000,000 loan. KeyBank was the highest bidder at $480,000, and thereafter sought confirmation of the sale, which the trial court granted following a hearing.
Summary: DILLARD, Judge. This appeal follows a nonjudicial foreclosure sale of property consisting of four houses and one developed lot. Appellee, KeyBank National Association, conducted the sale in August 2009 after appellants, Atreus Communities of America, LLC et al. (collectively referred to as "Atreus"), 1 defaulted on payment of a nearly $66,000,000 loan. KeyBank was the highest bidder at $480,000, and thereafter sought confirmation of the sale, which the trial court granted following a hearing. ..
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DILLARD, Judge.
This appeal follows a nonjudicial foreclosure sale of property consisting of four houses and one developed lot. Appellee, KeyBank National Association, conducted the sale in August 2009 after appellants, Atreus Communities of America, LLC et al. (collectively referred to as "Atreus"),1 defaulted on payment of a nearly $66,000,000 loan. KeyBank was the highest bidder at $480,000, and thereafter sought confirmation of the sale, which the trial court granted following a hearing.
At the confirmation hearing, Atreus did not challenge the validity of the statutory notices given, advertisements published, and/or reports filed by KeyBank regarding the foreclosure sale or that the sale was "regular,"2 but instead argued only that the property was not purchased at its true market value (as required by OCGA § 44-14-161(b)).3 The trial court disagreed, holding that KeyBank carried its burden of demonstrating by a preponderance of the evidence4 that the true market value of the subject property at the time of the foreclosure sale was indeed $480,000. On appeal, Atreus argues that the appraisal (as amended) proffered by KeyBank to the trial court for purposes of confirming the foreclosure sale was insufficient to support the true market value of the subject property. We disagree and affirm.
At the outset, we note that a party seeking to confirm a nonjudicial foreclosure sale must present the trial court with competent evidence of the subject property's true market value,5 and the court may not confirm the sale "unless it is satisfied that the property so sold brought its true market value on such foreclosure sale."6 Moreover, the trial judge in a confirmation hearing sits as a trier of fact, and the findings and conclusions reached by the court have the effect of a jury verdict.7 As such, witness credibility and the weight of the evidence proffered by the parties at a confirmation hearing are to be judged by the trial court, and not this Court on appeal.8 For this reason, we will not disturb a trial court's finding that property sold for its true market value if there is any evidence to support that decision,9 and we view the evidence presented below in the light most favorable to the trial court's judgment.10
And here, the evidence proffered at the confirmation hearing showed that KeyBank's first appraisal, conducted in May 2009 (a few months before the foreclosure sale), contained admitted errors because the appraisers were only able to conduct exterior inspections of the four homes.11 As a result of these errors, a second appraisal was conducted in January 2010 to serve as an addendum to the May 2009 appraisal and for purposes of determining the true market value of the subject property on the date of foreclosure sale (i.e., August 4, 2009).12
Both appraisals of the subject property were accomplished using the income-approach method of property valuation,13 which relies upon market data to develop a series of numerical inputs that calculate the average retail value of the subject property.14 This valuation is then discounted to account for factors such as any additional cost to complete the home, resulting in a calculation of the property's true market value.15 And in the case sub judice, the appraiser explained his use of this method while testifying at the confirmation hearing as to the various and sundry details of the May 2009 appraisal (later amended by the January 2010 appraisal).
Atreus's challenge to the appraisals focuses on the reductions the appraiser allotted for the cost to complete the homes because,16 despite the errors contained in the May 2009 appraisal, both appraisals ultimately concluded that the subject property's true market value was $480,000. Specifically, the cost-to-complete calculation in the May 2009 appraisal resulted in a discount of $40,000—or $10,000 per home—based on the following: (1) $4,000 for air conditioners; (2) $3,000 for appliance packages;17 and (3) $3,000 to account for the cost and trouble of installing the air conditioners and appliance packages. And because the expert appraiser18 based these estimated costs on personal and professional experience,19 including that of a colleague who assisted in the preparation of the appraisal and who renovates homes,20 this opinion was not based on sheer speculation.21 Nevertheless, because each house already contained an air conditioner (a fact unknown to the appraiser at the time the May 2009 appraisal was prepared), this initial cost-to-complete calculation was erroneous.
KeyBank's appraiser, however, corrected the errors contained in the May 2009 appraisal in the January 2010 appraisal, which incorporated the May 2009 appraisal and specifically noted that it was an addendum that "should only be used in conjunction with [the May 2009] report." The scope of the January 2010 appraisal addendum included "a re-inspection of the property and [a] review of changes in market conditions" since the May 2009 appraisal and through the date of the foreclosure sale. And in this addendum, the appraiser accounted for the airconditioning units already in the homes, decreasing the cost to complete the homes from $40,000 to $20,000 (or $5,000 per home), based in part on the continued need for appliance packages.22 The appraiser then testified at the confirmation hearing as to the details of his appraisal of the subject property (as amended), and the May 2009 and January 2010 appraisal reports were entered into evidence as exhibits. Specifically, the trial court was presented with evidence that the additional $2,000 for the cost to complete the homes—in addition to the $3,000 cost attributed to purchasing the necessary appliance packages—resulted from (1) a portion of the original calculation of $3,000 to account for the cost and trouble of installing the appliances (sans the consideration of air conditioners), and (2) the cost of newly discovered additional repairs deemed to be necessary in each house.23 This evidence was sufficient to support the trial court's conclusion that the appraisal (as amended) represented the true market value.24
Moreover, even if we shared Atreus's belief that the appraiser's recurring valuation for the subject property and cost-to-complete calculations strain credulity, the trial court was presented with additional, uncontested evidence to support its finding that the subject property sold for at least its true market value. Specifically, the appraiser testified that he received no direction whatsoever from KeyBank about the total to return when he reached $480,000 for the second time, and there was evidence that the true market value of the subject property in August 2009 may have actually been less than what KeyBank paid for it. Indeed, due to deterioration in market conditions between the May 2009 appraisal and the August 2009 foreclosure sale, the January 2010 appraisal addendum decreased the retail sales price of the subject homes by 3.5 percent—which was considered to be a conservative reduction— based on an approximately 13 percent decline in listing prices for other homes in the neighborhood and a 4 percent decline in market conditions for the zip code generally. Thus, had the appraiser made more aggressive assumptions and an adjustment for market conditions on the developed lot, the true market value of the subject property at the time of the foreclosure sale in August 2009 could have been well below $480,000.
Given the foregoing, the record contained sufficient evidence to permit the trial court to determine that the sale brought at least the true market value of the subject property, and we therefore affirm the trial court's confirmation of same.25
Judgment affirmed.
PHIPPS, P.J., and McFADDEN, J., concur.