Probate Estates Never Close. Or, Do They? Does The Five Year Rule Close Probate Estates Sub Silentio?
Hugh Wood, Esq., Atlanta, GA
Does the Five Year Automatic Dismissal Rule apply to the
closure of estates in Georgia. OCGA §
9-2-60(b)? [1] If your client is being
sued by an estate the executor or an administrator of the estate you might want
to check the probate court docket to see if any order has been entered in the
last five (5) years. Granted the vast majority
of estate claims are received during the time that an estate is in active
litigation. However, this author has
been involved in a number of claims where the action brought by an
administrator or executor was pursued well beyond five (5) years beyond any
activity in the estate.
There appears to be no definitive answer to this question
in Georgia.
The pertinent part of the Five Year Rule states as
follows: “Any action or other proceeding filed in any of the courts of this
state in which no written order is taken for a period of five years shall
automatically stand dismissed.” [1]
It is clear that a probate filing is a “proceeding.” However, what is unclear is whether the lack
of activity for more than five (5) years silently closes estates. While anecdotal, this author’s guess is that
if you polled “estate” experts they would dismiss this defense out of
hand. But should they?
There is at least one Georgia case where this issue was
raised as a serious defense. The
settlement of that case on other grounds caused this defense to not be
reviewed. However, it was considered a
serious defense within the context of the litigation. [2]
Georgia probate, at least in
litigation, substantially follows the Georgia Superior Court Rules. Georgia does have its own Uniform Probate Court
Rules. [3] OCGA § 9-2-60 is a specific
Georgia code section and only the Georgia courts can definitively state how it
applies to litigation. However,
California has a five year rule and many decades ago California’s five year
rule was applied to bar litigation by an Estate. In the context of caveat litigation, the
California Court of Appeals dismissed the caveat based on California’s
application of its own five (5) year rule.
In Re Morrison's Estate,125
Cal.App. 504, 14 P.2d 102 (1932). [4]
Georgia has 72 official probate forms. Many Georgia Probate Forms allow for the
opening of probate estates, but strangely, none provide for the closure of estates.
[5].
So how does one close and estate?
The best legal opinions in the Bar, is that you don’t close estates. In fairness, much of this article may not
apply to estates that are worth more than 5.4 million dollars or, like the
Estate of Elvis Aaron Presley, Memphis, Tennessee, have ongoing year to year
income. This analysis does not apply to
active estates.
The real “closure,”
if any, is based on when the largest threatened creditor, the IRS, officially
releases the estate with the Estate Tax Closing Letter. [6] In the Probate system, the filing of Form 33, if granted, allows for the discharge of the Personal Representative [Executor or Administrator] and in most probate courts leads to the administrative closure by the clerks (but not always). [5] [at Form 33]. The instructions for discharge, which may be relevant if you choose to discharge your personal representative, are listed below beside Form 33. Id.
The Georgia Court of Appeals allowed an accounting
petition to go forward even though it was well beyond the ten (10) year applicable
statute of limitations claim for petitioning for an accounting. [7] In re Estate of John Malcolm Wade, 331
Ga.App. 535, 771 S.E.2d 214 (Ga.App. 2015).
In fact, it was the “Wade,” case that caused this author to ponder
whether there were other defenses available to the Wade Executor to block the
Petition some 25 years after it could have been filed. The alleged “final” distribution was filed
while Reagan was President in 1988, and yet the Georgia Court of Appeals
allowed the petition for an accounting to go forward in the 2nd term
of President Obama’s administration.
That is long stretch of time, in this humble author’s opinion.
The Court of Appeals has applied the
five (5) year rule, despite its unintended harsh consequences. [8] Paul et al. v. Smith, Gambrell & Russell, 323 Ga.App.
447, 746 S.E.2d 739 (2013), the Georgia Court of Appeals allowed the
application of the five year rule to bar further trial court litigation – even
though the five years ran while the case was on appeal. Recall that a filed Notice of Appeal acts as
supersedeas and no action may be taken in the trial court while a case is on
appeal. The Court found that five (5)
years had run in the trial court, even though almost two years of the five years
was due to appeal supersedeas. How were the litigants to file anything in the
trial court to stop the draconian action of the five (5) year cutoff? That was not answered in the opinion nor is
it answered in the statute.
This author believes that the five (5) year rule is not
nuanced, but rather is a blunt instrument.
It is used to terminate old or stale litigation. Whether correct policy or not, it just
is.
The five (5) year rule may stop
zombie debt collection (and prosecution).
Granted that zombie debt is not common in the context of estate litigation,
but this author has seen it. Aged chain
store debt and aged credit card debt sold to zombie collectors may fall to this
defense if they are pursued more than five (5) years after any estate action.
So what is the conclusion of this matter? If your client is being pursued on a debt
that seems significantly aged and closed out of an estate there is no downside
not to raise the Five Year Rule. If you
are preparing to bring an action on behalf of an estate, its executor or
administrator, you might want to check the status of the probate estate to see
that some activity has occurred within the last five (5) years, if your claim
is aged.
Happy litigating.
Hugh Wood, Esq.
Wood & Meredith, LLP
3756 LaVista Road
Suite 250
Atlanta (Tucker), GA 30084
www.woodandmeredith.com
hwood@woodandmeredith.com
www.hughwood.blogspot.com
Phone: 404-633-4100
Fax: 404-633-0068
Wood & Meredith, LLP
3756 LaVista Road
Suite 250
Atlanta (Tucker), GA 30084
www.woodandmeredith.com
hwood@woodandmeredith.com
www.hughwood.blogspot.com
Phone: 404-633-4100
Fax: 404-633-0068
& & &
Endnotes:
[1]
OCGA §
9-2-60. Dismissal for want of prosecution; costs; recommencement within six
months
(a) For the
purposes of this Code section, an order of continuance will be deemed an order
and the word "proceedings" shall be held to include, but shall not be
limited to, an appeal from an award of assessors or a special master in a
condemnation proceeding.
(b) Any
action or other proceeding filed in any of the courts of this state in which no
written order is taken for a period of five years shall automatically stand
dismissed with costs to be taxed against the party plaintiff.
(c) When an
action is dismissed under this Code section, if the plaintiff recommences the
action within six months following the dismissal then the renewed action shall
stand upon the same footing, as to limitation, with the original action.
HISTORY: Ga.
L. 1953, Nov.-Dec. Sess., p. 342, 1, 2; Ga. L. 1967, p. 557, 1; Ga. L. 1984, p.
597, 1.
[2]
It is the Probate case that was associated with the following case; however, the citation is not available as of the date of this writing (mostly because the file is not available in an online searchable format). The Probate case filed in 2003 in the Probate Court of Fulton County is the underlying probate case associated with the RICO case that is shown by citation as follows: Rosario Diego Jimenez, Plaintiff vs.
Mari Luisa de Gregoriao, et al., USDC for NDGa – ATL Div., Case No. 1:03-cv-1638-BBM. Removed from Superior Court in a companion filing to In Re: The Estate of Natividad Jimenez
del Ray, Deceased, Probate Court of Fulton County, State of Georgia, Estate No.
185213. A probate matter in the county of Spain was in play with a companion probate filing in the United States. In the Fulton County Probate case a defense of the Five Year Rule was raised, but not reviewed. Unfortunately, without access to the litigants files, no copy is available for attachment to this article. Interview with probate
litigation attorney, Walter Hamberg, III, June 30, 2016.
[3]
Uniform
Probate Court Rules
[4]
125 Cal.App.
504, 14 P.2d 102 (1932)
District
Court of Appeal, First District, Division 1, California.
In Re
Morrison's Estate.
Goldborten Et
Al.v. Scott.
Gryzolet Et
Al. v. Scott.
Civ. 8322.
Aug. 26,
1932.Rehearing Denied Sept. 24, 1932.Hearing Denied by Supreme Court Oct. 24,
1932.
Appeals from
Superior Court, Alameda County; Lincoln S. Church, Judge.
Petitions by
Zysla Brucha Goldborten and another and by Chaja Malta Gryzolet and others against
Maud Scott, also known as Marion Scott, to revoke the probate of the will of
Leon Morrison, deceased. From orders of dismissal, contestants appeal.
Orders
reversed. [Copyright material removed]
Attorneys and
Law Firms
**103 *505
Livingston & Livingston, of San Francisco, for appellants.
William J.
Cullinan and Stanley Burke, both of San Francisco, for respondent.
Opinion
JOHNSON,
Justice pro tem.
In this
proceeding there are consolidated appeals from orders dismissing two petitions
to revoke probate of the will of Leon Morrison, deceased, one filed by persons
describing themselves as sisters of the deceased, the other by persons
declaring themselves to be nieces. The orders of dismissal were based on
section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure, under which, in the absence of a
written stipulation for an extension of time, it is made the duty of the court
to dismiss an action not brought to trial within five years after the filing of
the answer.
Leon Morrison
died on June 20, 1921; and, after a contest by the state of California, an
instrument dated January 12, 1921, purporting to be the will of the deceased,
was admitted to probate on August 14, 1923. An appeal from the order was taken
by the state, and on February 17, 1926, the remittitur from the Supreme Court
was filed showing affirmance of the order. Estate of Morrison, 198 Cal. 1, 242
P. 939.
Meanwhile a
petition by the alleged sisters of the deceased to revoke probate of the will
was filed on October 23, 1923, and another petition by the alleged nieces on
July 18, 1924. Answers to these petitions were filed respectively on March 16
and March 23, 1926, by the respondent, Maud Scott, as the proponent of the
will. A date was then set for the trial of the contests; but, as the time drew
near, the contestants concluded that the evidence available to them would not
suffice to overcome testimony in favor of the will given at the time of its
admission by two witnesses, John W. McKenzie and Barney Hoffman. Accordingly a
settlement was *506 arranged whereby the contestants received $2,000, and
thereupon, on June 16, 1926, dismissed their contests. A minute order to like
effect was made by the court on the same day.
Thereafter,
on July 8, 1926, McKenzie and Hoffman made a confession to the district
attorney of Alameda county that the testimony given by them in support of the
will had been false, and they stated that they had been procured to commit
perjury by said Maud Scott and others acting in her behalf. These men, on being
brought to trial on a charge of perjury, pleaded guilty, and were sentenced to
serve a term in the penitentiary.
Upon learning
of these disclosures, the contestants on August 13, 1926, filed notice of
motion to vacate the dismissals of their contests, and by order signed December
2, 1926, in fulfillment of a minute order made November 18, 1926, that motion
was granted with authorization to the contestants to proceed in due course with
the prosecution of their contests. A period of six months, lacking fourteen
days, thus intervened between the dismissal of the contests on June 16 and
their reinstatement on December 2, 1926. An appeal from the order of
reinstatement was undertaken by Miss Scott, but was dismissed on July 1, 1929,
on the ground that the order was not appealable. While that appeal was pending,
efforts were made by the contestants to procure depositions of McKenzie and
Hoffman and also of witnesses in Chicago, but delays ensued, due largely to
continuances requested by attorneys for Miss Scott.
On motion of
the contestants, the contests were finally set for trial for May 26, 1931; but
on May 1 Miss Scott filed notice of motion to dismiss both contests. By reason
of such motions, the trial of the contests was postponed by the court to August
5, 1931; and meanwhile, on July 23, the court made its orders granting the
motions on the sole ground that the contests had not been brought to trial
within five years after the answers were filed. The time which elapsed between
the earlier answer of Miss Scott and the date of the dismissals by the court
was five years, four months, and seven days.
From the
orders of dismissal, the contestants prosecute these appeals.
In addition
to the contests filed by the contestants as already mentioned, a petition to
revoke probate of the will *507 of said deceased was filed anew by the same
contestants on January 7, 1927. Certain questions affecting the status of that
petition are dealt with in the companion proceeding in prohibition of Maud
Scott v. Superior Court (Cal. App.) 14 P.(2d) 99, in which our opinion is this
day filed.
Upon the
present appeal, there are two questions presented for consideration, one as to
the applicability of section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure to a contest to
revoke probate of a will, the other as to the disallowance of credit in the
computation of time for the interval of approximately six months during which
the contests were suspended by virtue **104 of the dismissals effected by
concurrence of the parties. If this period of time is deductible, then the
contests cannot be treated as having been at issue for five years before the
dismissals in question.
1 While
section 583 must necessarily have a limited application to probate proceedings
in general, we are of the opinion that it may properly be extended to include a
contest to revoke probate of a will.
Such a
contest is an adversary proceeding, and in its essence is an action for
recovery of property claimed to be unlawfully taken, or about to be taken, from
the ownership of the contestant. He comes into court in the character of a
possessor of a chose in action, founded on the violation of a vested property
right by means of an instrument not truly testamentary; and, subject to certain
qualifications, he is entitled to have the merits of his cause determined by a
jury. Estate of Baker, 170 Cal. 578, 586–588, 150 P. 989; Estate of Clark, 94
Cal. App. 453, 460–461, 271 P. 542. The trial of a will contest has the
characteristics of a trial of an ordinary civil action involving title to
property; and, by section 1713 of the Code of Civil Procedure in force at the
time of the orders of dismissal, it was prescribed that, except as otherwise
specially provided, proceedings in probate should be governed by the rules of
practice in civil actions.
In People v.
Central Pac. R. R. Co., 83 Cal. 393, 404, 23 P. 303, 307, the court, quoting
from a law lexicon, defined practice as “that which regulates the formal steps
in an action or other judicial proceeding. It therefore deals with writs,
summonses, pleadings, affidavits, notices, motions, *508 petitions, orders,
trials, judgments, appeals, costs, and executions.”
Rules of
practice are designed to establish the manner of bringing parties into court,
and, when they are there, prescribe the course to be followed by the parties
and the court throughout the various stages of the litigation, in hearing,
dealing with, and disposing of the matters in dispute. 49 C. J. 1312. The
purpose is to harmonize and facilitate the conduct of litigation; and, since
such rules deal with all phases of a case from its inception to final judgment,
the time within which an action or proceeding shall either be brought to trial,
or dismissed as burdensome to an adversary and to the court as well, is a
proper subject for an administrative formula in aid of a definite and uniform
mode of procedure.
It is the
policy of the law to expedite the administration of estates; and it would seem
that the reasons which influenced the adoption of section 583 justify an
interpretation of the word “action” sufficiently broad to include a proceeding
such as the contest of a will.
The
appellants rely with much confidence, however, on the ruling of the court in
Estate of Simmons, 168 Cal. 390, 395, 143 P. 697, whereby section 581a, Code of
Civil Procedure, authorizing dismissal for failure to have summons issued in an
action within one year, was held to be inapplicable to a will contest, wherein
a year had been allowed to pass without issuance of a citation. The rationale
of that decision is that, as section 1328, Code of Civil Procedure, then in
force, prescribed the period of one year for issuance of a citation, without
annexing any penalty for the omission, the court was free to exercise its
discretion in relieving the contestant from default and authorizing the
issuance of a citation, notwithstanding the lapse of time. In other words, the
court took the view that there was a probate rule which forbade application of
the rule governing similar defaults in civil actions.
Appellants
invoke also the decision in Estate of Joseph, 118 Cal. 660, 50 P. 768, rendered
in 1897, wherein insistence was laid upon the distinction between an action and
a special proceeding; and, by a strict interpretation of the word “action,” the
right to demand an undertaking from a nonresident plaintiff as security for
costs was limited to *509 the defendant in a civil action only. By an amendment
made in 1903, however, the benefit of the section was made available in special
proceedings also.
While no sure
guide to the extension of the rules of civil practice to proceedings in probate
is furnished by the numerous decisions in this state on various points of
probate procedure, it may at any rate be said with certainty that the use of
the word “action” by itself in a Code section is not controlling. This is
illustrated in Estate of Knauft, 59 Cal. App. 536, 211 P. 29, where section
354, Code of Civil Procedure, was made to toll the statute of limitations in
behalf of an alien enemy who had instituted a will contest after expiration of
the ordinary statutory period; and in the course of its opinion, in reference
to a dismissal without prejudice, the court declared that it saw no reason why
section 581, Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision 4, was not applicable to a
proceeding in probate. A portion of that opinion is quoted with approval in
Estate of Cook, 205 Cal. 581, 588, 271 P. 1083, and is followed by the
statement of the Supreme Court that the pronouncement approved is authority
that the rule governing dismissal of actions generally under section 581 is
applicable to probate proceedings.
Since the
orders under review were made, section 1713 of the Code of Civil Procedure has
been reframed in section 1233 of the Probate Code; and, with a view to
clarification, that section now provides that the rules of civil practice shall
be applicable to proceedings under the Probate Code “with regard to trials, new
trials, appeals, records on appeal, **105 and all other matters of procedure.”
In so far as trials are concerned, we do not interpret this section as
enlarging the scope of former section 1713, Code of Civil Procedure; and to our
minds section 583, depriving the court of jurisdiction to try an action when
there has been a delay of five years, is, and always has been, as much a
general rule, affecting actions and special proceedings alike, as a rule
declaring when an action or special proceeding is at issue and ready for trial.
2 We are now
brought to the second question, the elimination of the period of suspension
intervening between the conventional dismissals on June 16, 1926, and the
reinstatement of the contests by the court on December 2, 1926.
*510 The
respondent insists that the suspension had no effect whatever so far as section
583 is concerned, and relies on a statement of the court in Miller & Lux,
Inc., v. Superior Court, 192 Cal. 333, 338, 219 P. 1006, that nothing short of
a written stipulation expressly extending the time of trial beyond the
five–year period, or expressly waiving the right to a dismissal, will suffice
to toll the running of the statutory time. The court was there reiterating the
general rule in its relation to a stipulation in that particular case which was
found insufficient to meet the requirements of the law. Attention was not then
being centered upon a situation which temporarily deprived the trial court of
jurisdiction to proceed with the trial of the action. If such a situation had
been in the mind of the court, reference would doubtless have been made to
Kinard v. Jordan, 175 Cal. 13, 164 P. 894, 895, where it was held that, while
an appeal was pending, the case was removed from the jurisdiction of the trial
court, and necessarily exempt from the operation of section 583. Again, in
Allyne v. Superior Court, 200 Cal. 661, 664, 254 P. 564, in dealing with the
application of the section to the prosecution of an action after entry of an
order granting a new trial, the court declared that the plain and obvious
purpose of the section was to regulate the matter of compulsory dismissals only
under one set of circumstances, namely, where the action had not been brought
to trial within five years after filing of the answer, and that, so far as a
retrial was concerned, the section had no relevancy.
In Kruly v.
Superior Court (Cal. App.) 10 P.(2d) 178, several years intervened between the
resting of the case after introduction of certain evidence and the resetting
for trial. The trial court having denied a motion to dismiss under section 583,
a writ of mandamus was applied for, but was denied upon the ground that suspension
of proceedings after commencement of the trial did not set the statute in
motion.
Situations
are thus recognized which repel a strained construction of the statute.
No logical
distinction can be made between a temporary suspension of proceedings in the
trial court, consequent upon a dismissal induced by fraud or mistake, and a
suspension of the power of the trial court to proceed by reason of the pendency
of an appeal. In either case, the action or proceeding *511 is withdrawn from
the cognizance of the court of first instance during the period of suspension.
And as in Kinard v. Jordan, supra, the case was taken out of the operation of
section 583 while an appeal was pending, so in like manner the period of
suspension here should be excluded in computing the quinquennium at the end of
which the jurisdiction of the court expires by operation of law. In Kinard v.
Jordan, begun in March, 1906, there was a motion to dismiss the action, made in
September, 1914, and based on that portion of section 583, which empowers the
court in its discretion to dismiss an action, if not brought to trial within
two years after filing of the answer. There had previously been a judgment for
the plaintiff on the merits, but on appeal that judgment had been reversed in
March, 1909. 10 Cal. App. 219, 101 P. 696. Thereupon certain proceedings were
had which resulted in another judgment in November, 1911, and another reversal
on appeal therefrom in March, 1914, 167 Cal. 333, 139 P. 797. Then came the
motion to dismiss, which was granted, but upon appeal the order was reversed.
In reversing the order, the Supreme Court, after referring to the judgment of
November, 1911, said: “That judgment, however erroneous it may be, purported to
determine the case. The aforesaid appeals taken therefrom suspended all power
of the court below to proceed, and necessarily took the case out of the
operation of section 583 while the appeals remained pending.”
The
respondent, citing Wolters v. Rossi, 126 Cal. 644, 59 P. 143, and Page v.
Superior Court, 76 Cal. 372, 18 P. 385, contends that the dismissals in
question, being based upon a written request to the clerk by the attorneys of
the contestants, did not suspend proceedings at all, but left the contests at
all times pending.
But the
dismissals in the cases cited were before the amendment made in 1897 to section
581 of the Code of Civil Procedure, authorizing dismissal by entry in the
clerk's register upon written consent of the attorney of the party requesting
dismissal. Consequently, those cases are no longer declaratory of the law on
that point. Hopkins v. Superior Court, 136 Cal. 552, 555, 69 P. 299. Moreover,
there does appear to have been a minute order of dismissal by the court.
*512 It is
contended further on behalf of respondent that the order vacating the
dismissals had the effect of nullifying the intermission and placing the
contests in the same situation in all respects as if there had been no
dismissals at all. While the order **106 of restoration brought the contests
again under the jurisdiction of the court, it cannot be said that by its own
flat the court could create for itself a retroactive jurisdiction. When it is
stated that upon the vacation of an order or judgment the case is restored to
the previously existing status, that means that the parties are placed in their
original situation for the purpose of litigating the matters in controversy.
The restoration revives the right to enforce whatever claims or obligations
existed at the commencement of the action, and makes them subject to future
determination in due course. That is far from indulging a fiction that the case
was in court for purposes of trial when it was not.
Thus the
question is merely whether the time when the contests were out of court shall
be counted. In Kinard v. Jordan, supra, the Supreme Court established the
precedent of disregarding the time during which the jurisdiction of the trial
court was suspended, thereby setting reality above artificiality; and in our
judgment it is our duty, under the circumstances shown in the record before us,
to follow that precedent.
The orders
dismissing the petitions of said contestants to revoke probate of the will of
said deceased are each reversed.
We concur:
KNIGHT, Acting P. J.; CASHIN, J.
All Citations
[5]
Cumulative
Form Listing (name and GPCSF number)
General Instructions
Form 2: Petition for Temporary Letters of
Administration
Form 3: Petition for Letters of
Administration
Form 4: Petition to Probate Will in Common
Form
Form 5: Petition to Probate Will in Solemn
Form
Form 6: Reserved See Supplement 6
Form 7: Petition to Probate Will in Solemn
Form & for Letters of Administration w/ Will Annexed
Form 8: Petition for Letters of
Administration with Will Annexed (Will Previously Probated)
Form 9: Petition for Order Declaring No
Administration Necessary
Form 10: Petition for Year's Support
Form 11: Petition for the Appointment of an
Emergency Guardian and/or Conservator for a Proposed Ward
Form 12: Petition for the Appointment of a
Guardian and/or Conservator for a Proposed Ward
Form 13: Petition of Personal
Representative for Leave to Sell Property
Form 14: Petition of Conservator for Leave
to Sell Property or Rent, Lease, or Otherwise Dispose of Property
Form 15: Petition for Leave to Sell
Perishable Property by Conservator
Form 16: Reserved See Supplement 1
Form
17: Petition for Leave to Convey or Encumber Property Previously Set Aside as
Year's Support
Form 18: Petition for Presumption of Death
of Missing Indvividual Believed to be Dead
Form 19: Petition to Compromise Doubtful
Claim of Minor/Ward
Form 20: Petition for Leave to Encroach on
Corpus
Form 21: Bond of Administrators,
Conservators, & Executors, Etc.
Form 22: Petition to Establish Custodial
Account for Minor or Incapacitated Adult
Form 23: GPCSF 23 through 27 Reserved/Relocated
Form 28: Petition for Temporary Letters of
Guardianship of Minor
Form 29: Petition for Permanent Letters of
Guardianship of Minor
Form 30: Petition for Letters of
Conservatorship of Minor
Form 31: Application for Permit to Conduct
Public Fireworks Display
Form 32: Petition by Personal
Representative for Waiver of Bond and/or Grant of Certain Powers
Form 33: Petition for Discharge of Personal
Representative
PETITION FOR DISCHARGE OF PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE
INSTRUCTIONS
I. Specific Instructions
1. This form is to be used for a Petition for Discharge of a Personal Representative pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 53-7-50 or Discharge of a Temporary Administrator pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 53-7-52. A Personal Representative may, pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 53-7-50(e), petition the court solely for discharge from office but not from all liability.
2. If the Petition is filed by a Personal Representative, the notice to debtors and creditors must have been published for four weeks, and three months must have elapsed from the date of the last publication. O.C.G.A. §§ 53-7-41, 53-11-4.
3. Signatures of heirs who acknowledge service must be sworn to before a notary public or the Clerk of any Probate Court of this State. It is not necessary that all acknowledgments appear on the same page. An attorney at law may acknowledge service on behalf of an heir; however, the attorney must certify that he or she currently represents that heir with regard to the pending matter and, in order to comply with O.C.G.A. § 53-11-6, the attorney's signature must be sworn to as provided above. With regard to a power of attorney, the attorney-in-fact may acknowledge service on behalf of the grantor of the power, provided that the power of attorney grants such authority, the signature of the attorney-in-fact is attested, a copy of the power of attorney is attached, and the attorney-in-fact certifies that the copy is a true copy and is still in effect.
4. O.C.G.A. § 53-11-2 provides that a party to a probate proceeding who is not sui juris must be represented by a guardian provided that the Court may appoint a guardian ad litem or determine that the natural guardian, guardian, conservator, or testamentary guardian has no conflict and may serve. Should a guardian ad litem be necessary because a party is not sui juris, use Supplement 1.
5. Use Supplement 2 if the Court determines it is appropriate to appoint a special process server.
6. Use Supplement 3 when an additional certificate of service is necessary.7. In the event the Decedent died intestate, Paragraph 3 requires that a definitive statement be made to show to the court that the persons named in Paragraph 2 constitute all of the heirs of the Decedent and that there are no heirs of the same or closer degree according to O.C.G.A. § 53-2-1. Provide the date of death for any deceased heirs. [NOTE: If you are uncertain how to determine the heirs of a Decedent, please refer to the “Heirs Determination Sheet” available from the probate court or at www.gaprobate.gov.] Examples of such statement would be: (a) “Decedent was or was not married at the time of his death and had no children born, adopted, living or deceased, other than listed herein”; (b) “Decedent had no other siblings half or whole other than those listed herein”; (c) “the Decedent’s brother who died previously had no other children born, adopted, living or deceased, other than listed herein.”8. According to Probate Court Rule 5.6 (A), unless the Court specifically assumes the responsibility, it is the responsibility of the moving party to prepare the proper citation and deliver it properly so it can be served according to law. All pages after the Notice regarding Uniform Probate Court Rule 5.6 (A) are to be completed by the moving party, unless otherwise directed by the Court.
PETITION FOR DISCHARGE OF PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE
INSTRUCTIONS
I. Specific Instructions
1. This form is to be used for a Petition for Discharge of a Personal Representative pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 53-7-50 or Discharge of a Temporary Administrator pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 53-7-52. A Personal Representative may, pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 53-7-50(e), petition the court solely for discharge from office but not from all liability.
2. If the Petition is filed by a Personal Representative, the notice to debtors and creditors must have been published for four weeks, and three months must have elapsed from the date of the last publication. O.C.G.A. §§ 53-7-41, 53-11-4.
3. Signatures of heirs who acknowledge service must be sworn to before a notary public or the Clerk of any Probate Court of this State. It is not necessary that all acknowledgments appear on the same page. An attorney at law may acknowledge service on behalf of an heir; however, the attorney must certify that he or she currently represents that heir with regard to the pending matter and, in order to comply with O.C.G.A. § 53-11-6, the attorney's signature must be sworn to as provided above. With regard to a power of attorney, the attorney-in-fact may acknowledge service on behalf of the grantor of the power, provided that the power of attorney grants such authority, the signature of the attorney-in-fact is attested, a copy of the power of attorney is attached, and the attorney-in-fact certifies that the copy is a true copy and is still in effect.
4. O.C.G.A. § 53-11-2 provides that a party to a probate proceeding who is not sui juris must be represented by a guardian provided that the Court may appoint a guardian ad litem or determine that the natural guardian, guardian, conservator, or testamentary guardian has no conflict and may serve. Should a guardian ad litem be necessary because a party is not sui juris, use Supplement 1.
5. Use Supplement 2 if the Court determines it is appropriate to appoint a special process server.
6. Use Supplement 3 when an additional certificate of service is necessary.7. In the event the Decedent died intestate, Paragraph 3 requires that a definitive statement be made to show to the court that the persons named in Paragraph 2 constitute all of the heirs of the Decedent and that there are no heirs of the same or closer degree according to O.C.G.A. § 53-2-1. Provide the date of death for any deceased heirs. [NOTE: If you are uncertain how to determine the heirs of a Decedent, please refer to the “Heirs Determination Sheet” available from the probate court or at www.gaprobate.gov.] Examples of such statement would be: (a) “Decedent was or was not married at the time of his death and had no children born, adopted, living or deceased, other than listed herein”; (b) “Decedent had no other siblings half or whole other than those listed herein”; (c) “the Decedent’s brother who died previously had no other children born, adopted, living or deceased, other than listed herein.”8. According to Probate Court Rule 5.6 (A), unless the Court specifically assumes the responsibility, it is the responsibility of the moving party to prepare the proper citation and deliver it properly so it can be served according to law. All pages after the Notice regarding Uniform Probate Court Rule 5.6 (A) are to be completed by the moving party, unless otherwise directed by the Court.
Form 34: Petition of Conservator for Final
Settlement of Accounts and Discharge from Office and Liability
Form 35: Reserved See Supplement 4
Form 36: Petition for the Appointment of a
Temporary Medical Consent Guardian for a Proposed Medical Consent Ward
Form 37: 37 through 51 Reserved/Relocated
Form 52: Default Certificate
Form 53: Commission to Administer Oath
Form 54: Service upon Minor or Adult Ward
through Service Upon Guardian
Form 55: GPCSF 55 through 57
Reserved/Relocated
Form 58: Adult Conservatorship Inventory
and Asset Management Plan
Form 59: Minor Conservator Inventory and
Asset Management Program
Form 60: GPCSF 60 Reserved
Form 65: Petition for the Restoration of an
Individual Found to Be in Need of a Guardian and/or Conservator
Form 70: Certificate in Accordance with
Uniform Probate Court Rule 5.9(D)
Form 71: Petition for Leave to Sell
Perishable Property by Personal Representative
Form 72: Petition for Determination of
Right of Disposition of Remains of a Decedent
Supplement 1: Determination by Court that a
Person May Act as Guardian or Appointment of Guardian Ad Litem
Supplement 2: Appointment of Special
Process Server
Supplement 3: Certificate of Service
Supplement 4: Guardian/Conservator/Personal
Representative Oath
Supplement 5: Petition for Letters of
Testamentary Guardianship
Supplement 6: Interrogatories to Witness to
Will
See. www.gaprobate.gov / forms
[6]
When can I
expect the Estate Tax Closing Letter?
For all
estate tax returns filed on or after June 1, 2015, estate tax closing letters
will be issued only upon request by the taxpayer. Please wait at least four
months after filing the return to make the closing letter request to allow time
for processing. To request a closing letter please call (866) 699-4083 and
provide the following information:
Name of the decedent;
Decedent’s social security number;
Date of Death.
The closing
letter will be prepared and issued to the executor at the address of record.
For any additional questions about estate tax closing letter requests or the
status of the return, call (866) 699-4083.
See also,
Am I required
to file an estate tax return?
If the
decedent is a U.S. citizen or resident and decedent's death occurred in 2016,
an estate tax return (Form 706) must be filed if the gross estate of the
decedent, increased by the decedent's adjusted taxable gifts and specific gift
tax exemption, is valued at more than the filing threshold for the year of the
decedent's death. The filing threshold for 2016 is $5,450,000, for 2015 is
$5,430,000, for 2014 is $5,340,000, for 2013 is $5,250,000, for 2012 is
$5,120,000, and for 2011 is $5,000,000. An estate tax return also must be filed
if the estate elects to transfer any deceased spousal unused exclusion (DSUE)
amount to a surviving spouse, regardless of the size of the gross estate or
amount of adjusted taxable gifts. The election to transfer a DSUE amount to a
surviving spouse is known as the portability election.
An estate tax
return may need to be filed for a decedent who was a nonresident and not a U.S.
citizen if the decedent had U.S.-situated assets. Refer to Some Nonresidents
with U.S. Assets Must File Estate Tax Returns to learn more.
&&&
See also, the discharge of personal liabiltiy by the personal represenative for the taxes owed the federal government by the testator/estate. 26 U.S. Code § 6905 - Discharge of executor from personal liability for decedent’s income and gift taxes: (a) Discharge of liability. In the case of liability of a decedent for taxes imposed by subtitle A or by chapter 12, if the executor makes written application (filed after the return with respect to such taxes is made and filed in such manner and such form as may be prescribed by regulations of the Secretary for release from personal liability for such taxes, the Secretary may notify the executor of the amount of such taxes. The executor, upon payment of the amount of which he is notified, after 9 months after receipt of the application if no notification is made by the Secretary before such date, shall be discharged from personal liability for any deficiency in such tax thereafter found to be due, and shall be entitled to a receipt or writing showing such discharge. (b) Definition of executor. For purposes of this section, the term “executor” means the executor or administrator of the decedent appointed, qualified, and acting within the United States. (c) Cross reference. For discharge of executor from personal liability for taxes imposed under chapter 11, see section 2204. (Added Pub. L. 91–614, title I, § 101(e)(1), Dec. 31, 1970, 84 Stat. 1837; amended Pub. L. 91–614, title I, § 101(f), Dec. 31, 1970, 84 Stat. 1838; Pub. L. 94–455, title XIX, § 1906(b)(13)(A), Oct. 4, 1976, 90 Stat. 1834.).
[7]
In re Estate
of John Malcolm Wade, 331 Ga.App. 535, 771 S.E.2d 214 (2015).
A14A2013
Court of
Appeals of Georgia
March 25,
2015
Estate. Charlton Superior Court.
Before Judge DeVane.
Brown, Readdick, Bumgartner, Carter,
Strickland & Watkins, G. Todd Carter, Emily R. Hancock, for appellant.
Gibson & Associates, Adrienne J.
Gibson, Douglas L. Gibson, Kenneth A. Taft, for appellee.
OPINION
Branch, Judge.
In a 1982 will, John Malcolm Wade
named all five of his children as co-executors of his estate. Soon after Wade
died in 1987, the probate court issued letters testamentary to all five
children, thereby appointing them as
Page 215
co-executors.
Almost 25 years later, in August 2012, appellant Mary Virginia Wade petitioned
the probate court to obtain an accounting of her siblings' dealings on behalf
of the estate. After a trial, the probate court concluded that the siblings had
[331 Ga.App. 536] violated the terms of their father's will and ordered an
accounting of the estate. Three of the four siblings -- Bonnie Conner, Dorothy
Vuturo, and Malcolm Wade[1] -- appealed to the superior court, where they moved
for summary judgment on grounds including that Mary's action for an accounting
was time-barred. On this appeal from the superior court's grant of the
siblings' motion, Mary argues that her action is not time-barred because the
estate was still open and because there was no adverse possession by her
siblings that would have caused her cause of action to accrue and the statute
of limitation to have run. We agree and therefore reverse.
On appeal from the decision of a probate
court, the superior court conducts a de novo investigation of the probate
court's proceedings, and in doing so, will consider the records from the
probate court, as well as other competent evidence which may not have been
presented to the probate court.
Garren v.
Garren, 316 Ga.App. 646, 647 (2) (730 S.E.2d 123) (2012), citing OCGA § 5-3-29.
" 'It is not the province of the superior court on such an appeal to
review and affirm, but to try the issue anew and pass original judgments on the
questions involved as if there had been no previous trial.' " Id. at 648
(3), quoting Knowles v. Knowles, 125 Ga.App. 642, 645 (1) (188 S.E.2d 800)
(1972). " To prevail at summary judgment under OCGA § 9-11-56, the moving
party must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that
the undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
party, warrant judgment as a matter of law." Lau's Corp. v. Haskins, 261
Ga. 491 (405 S.E.2d 474) (1991) (citations omitted). This Court reviews a trial
court's grant of summary judgment de novo, construing the record in the light
most favorable to the nonmovant. Ethridge v. Davis, 243 Ga.App. 11, 12 (530
S.E.2d 477) (2000).
Thus viewed in favor of Mary, the
record, which is scant, shows that on December 29, 1987, all five of the Wade
children were sworn in as co-executors. At some point shortly after their
appointment, the siblings orally agreed that Mary would be the "
coordinating executor" charged with paying the estate's bills. At some
later point, however, the siblings agreed that any three of them could
authorize payments by the estate and that Bonnie should administer its assets
so as to wind up its affairs within six years. At an unspecified date, Mary
took [331 Ga.App. 537] a share of the estate's personal property according to a
system of apportionment also agreed upon by all five children. By another
unspecified date, Mary had packed up the estate's papers and shipped them to
Bonnie.
In March 1988, a bank sent all five
siblings checks and stock certificates representing what the bank called a
"final distribution" from the estate's account at that bank. Of the
five siblings, only Mary did not sign and return receipts for this attempted
distribution. In August 1988, Malcolm negotiated a $1 million loan from a
second bank to the estate in exchange for an interest in estate assets
including real property in North Carolina and Georgia as well as nearly 9,000
shares of stock in the privately held " N. G. Wade Investment Co." In
March 1989, Malcolm executed a power of attorney as to estate matters in favor
of Bonnie.
In February 1991, all five siblings
received a summary from a certified public accountant valuing the estate's
assets at approximately $1.2 million. By January 1993, Mary had received a
four-carat diamond and documents concerning the estate's assets from Dorothy.
In March 1993, Mary contacted the estate's accountant to ask for documents and
noted that " until I have adequate financial records to see that Estate
assets are distributed properly, I will not sign any papers to close the
Estate[.]" In the same document, Mary also asserted that estate funds
" ha[d] been spent without [her] knowledge or consent."
Page 216
In March
1994, Mary asked Bonnie for copies of documents relevant to the estate,
including transfers of a house and an automobile and a copy of a sale agreement
concerning timber on property located in North Carolina. In January 1999, Mary
paid $60,000 on her own behalf and Bonnie paid $60,000 on behalf of the four
remaining siblings to close out the 1988 loan to the estate. In the same year,
Carolyn demanded that Bonnie allow her to review the estate's financial
records.
In January 2009, Bonnie wrote to Mary
asking for her signature on an agreement between all the siblings to harvest
timber from the estate's land in Charlton County and share the proceeds
thereof, estimated at $27,700. The draft agreement noted that " a fire or
pine beetles among other disasters could dev[a]state this gain offered to [the
siblings] at any time." Bonnie also asked for Mary's signature on a second
document requesting the probate court to close the estate, " all the
business thereof being completed," and a recent bank statement showing an
estate account balance of $9,547.76. Bonnie later averred that the siblings also
sought to divide the Charlton County parcel at this time. Mary did not sign or
return either the draft agreement or the request to close the estate.
[331 Ga.App. 538] In August 2012,
Mary filed her petition for an accounting in probate court. As they had
previously, Dorothy and Malcolm filed notarized documents in the probate court
authorizing Bonnie to act on their behalf concerning the estate. Dorothy stated
that Bonnie had generated " remarkable amounts of money" for the
beneficiaries, had " found the highest prices to be paid for timber and
land sales," and " created and oversaw many positive outcomes for her
brother and sisters." After the November 2012 hearing, at which only Mary
and Bonnie appeared,[2] the probate court held that that in light of Bonnie's
admission that she or others had " intentionally destroyed" many
estate records, " any difficulty the co-executors have had in preparing an
accounting [would] be entirely self-inflicted." The probate court also
concluded that " decisions regarding the administration of the
estate" had been made " by a majority of the co-executors,"
rather than unanimously, in apparent violation of both OCGA § 53-7-5 (a)[3] and
the terms of John Malcolm Wade's will, which did not contain any provision for
majority rather than unanimous action. The probate court ordered an accounting
within 90 days.
In January 2013, the siblings appealed
the probate court's ruling to the superior court. Both sides moved for summary
judgment -- the siblings on the grounds that Mary's petition was time-barred
and that she had refused to relinquish the diamond or otherwise agree to a
division of the estate's property, and Mary on the ground that the siblings
were required to render an accounting as a matter of law. In an August 2013
affidavit, Bonnie testified that the estate's only remaining undistributed
assets were the 29-acre Charlton County parcel of land and the diamond Mary had
received many years before. Also in August 2013, the siblings filed a
counterclaim against Mary for conversion of the family diamond. In April 2014,
the superior court granted the siblings' motion for summary judgment without
explanation and without ruling on the siblings' counterclaim. This appeal
followed.
[331 Ga.App. 539] 1. As the parties
agree, the first question is whether Mary's petition for an accounting is
time-barred under OCGA § § 53-7-62 (a)
Page 217
and 9-3-27.
Mary argues that she may seek an accounting at any time while the estate
remains open, while the siblings argue that Mary was required to bring such an
action no later than ten years and six months after the appointment of the
co-executors. Both of these contentions miss the mark.
OCGA § 53-7-62 (a) provides in
relevant part that " [a]ny person interested as an heir or beneficiary of
an estate or the probate court may, after the expiration of six months from the
granting of letters, cite the personal representative to appear before the
probate court for a settlement of accounts." OCGA § 9-3-27 provides that
" [a]ll actions against executors, administrators, or guardians, except on
their bonds, shall be brought within ten years after the right of action
accrues." The ten-year limitation period of OCGA § 9-3-27 applies to
petitions for an accounting. Rowland v. Rowland, 204 Ga. 603, 608 (5) (50
S.E.2d 343) (1948).
The five original co-executors
received their letters testamentary in December 1987, with the result that Mary
could have brought an action for accounting as early as June 1988, or six
months after their appointment. OCGA § 53-7-62 (a). As co-executors, however,
each of the five siblings owes all the others, who are also co-beneficiaries,
the care required of a fiduciary. Bloodworth v. Bloodworth, 260 Ga.App. 466,
471 (1) (579 S.E.2d 858) (2003) (" [a]s fiduciaries," co-executors
" acquired a number of legal duties in relation to the
beneficiaries," including " full and fair disclosure in a timely
manner of all things adversely affecting" the beneficiaries' rights).
Because of the high standard of care imposed on executors, the Supreme Court of
Georgia has long refused to apply the ten-year statute of limitation to bar a
beneficiary's action for accounting by an executor in the absence of evidence
that the executor has held the estate's property adversely to the beneficiary:
[I]t is well settled in [Georgia] that not
only in express or implied trusts, but in other fiduciary relations, the
statute [of limitation] will not begin to run so long as the trust or duty with
regard to specific property continues, is acknowledged to be subsisting, and
there is no change of status to show an adverse holding of such property; that
as long as a person who is in possession of the property of another, using the
same for the owner's benefit, recognizes the latter's ownership, no lapse of
time will bar the owner from asserting his title as against the person in
possession ; that before any lapse of time will be a bar to the owner it must
appear that the [331 Ga.App. 540] person in possession has given notice, or
there must be circumstances shown which would be equivalent to notice to the
owner that the person in possession claims adversely to him ; that in such a
case the statute will begin to run from the date of such notice; and that until
the owner has such notice he has the right to treat the possession of the other
person as his own.
Reynolds v.
Dorsey, 188 Ga. 218, 221 (2) (3 S.E.2d 564) (1939) (citations omitted; emphasis
supplied); Salter v. Salter, 209 Ga. 90, 95 (2) (70 S.E.2d 453) (1952); Manry
v. Manry, 196 Ga. 365, 369 (2) (26 S.E.2d 706) (1943) (" So long as the
executors h[o]ld the title and possession of [an] estate as such, it [is] a continuing
executory trust, and the bar of the statute of limitations does not run against
such a trust until its termination or repudiation." ) (citations omitted);
see also In re Estate of Holtzclaw, 293 Ga.App. 577 (667 S.E.2d 432) (2008)
(concerning fee awards arising from a petition for accounting brought in 2005
against an executor appointed in 1984, but not addressing the accrual of the
petitioner's cause of action).
It is true that in her 1993 letter to
the estate's accountant, Mary both asked for information as to the estate and
accused at least one of her siblings of " spending" at least some of
the estate's assets without her " knowledge or consent." This letter
was sent to the estate's accountant, not to any of her co-executors, however,
and it sought to reserve Mary's own right as co-executor to review the
documents, and not to exercise her right as a beneficiary to obtain an
accounting. Compare Rowland, 204 Ga. at 604, 608 (5) (applying OCGA § 9-3-27 to
bar an action for accounting where the executor, " although requested to
do so," had " never made any accounting or settlement
Page 218
with the
[beneficiaries] for their interest in [an] estate" ). Further, we have
seen nothing in the record to suggest that the siblings ever denied Mary's
status as a co-beneficiary of any specific property owned by the estate. To the
contrary, the record also shows that whatever disagreements may have arisen
about the disposition of the estate, no sibling ever repudiated any other
sibling's right to a proportionate share in those contents, as when the
siblings presented Mary with a proposed settlement of the estate's assets in
1988, only four months after the appointment of the co-executors, and in 2009,
when they attempted to dispose of the Charlton County land parcel and to close
the estate.
A question of fact thus remains as to
whether any of the siblings' actions before the filing of Mary's petition put
Mary on notice that they had claimed any estate property adversely to her.
Because we cannot say as a matter of law that the siblings adversely held the
[331 Ga.App. 541] estate's assets or repudiated Mary's claim on them at any
time before Mary filed her petition, a jury must decide whether the ten-year
bar of OCGA § 9-3-27 began to run before that time. It follows that the trial
court erred when it granted summary judgment to the siblings on this basis.
Salter, 209 Ga. at 96-97 (affirming overruling of demurrer to petition for
accounting where nothing on the face of the petition showed that the trust at
issue " was not acknowledged to be subsisting or that there was any change
of status to show an adverse holding by the executors that would bring this
case within the statute of limitations" ); Manry, 196 Ga. at 369 (2)
(where a will did not direct when a division of an estate was to be made, a
beneficiary's action for accounting was not time-barred when the executors had
qualified 15 years before but had not disposed of the estate's assets until six
years before the filing of the action).
2. The record shows that the siblings also
moved for summary judgment on the ground that Mary had refused to agree to a
division of the estate's property. The trial court made no finding on this
question, and the parties have not briefed the matter on appeal. We therefore
leave it to further proceedings below. See City of Gainesville v. Dodd, 275 Ga.
834, 835-836 (573 S.E.2d 369) (2002) (appellate court may exercise its
discretion to determine whether a ground for summary judgment raised but not
ruled on below is properly affirmed). Our decision also moots Mary's assertion
that the trial court erred in failing to grant her summary judgment.
Judgment reversed.
Barnes, P. J., and Boggs, J., concur.
---------
Notes:
[1]The
fourth sibling, Carolyn, did not appear
at the hearing before the probate court below and is not a party to this
appeal.
[2]The record
does not include a transcript of the hearing before the probate court.
[3]OCGA §
53-7-5 (a) of the Revised Probate Code of 1998 provides that
" [i]f more than one personal
representative is qualified and unless the will provides otherwise ... , [t]he
personal representatives must act by their unanimous action[.]" The same
subsection also specifies, however, that " [t]he personal representatives
may delegate in writing to one or more of them the authority to act for all of
them; provided, however, that all the personal representatives remain liable
for the actions of the personal
representative who is authorized to act." Id. Mary has not asserted any
error as to the application of the Revised Probate Code to this dispute. See
OCGA § 53-1-1 (b) (Revised Probate Code of 1998 became effective on January 1
of that year, " provided, however, that no vested rights of title, year's
support, succession, or inheritance shall be impaired" ); McPherson v.
McPherson, 307 Ga.App. 548, 550-551 (1) (a) (705 S.E.2d 314) (applying Revised
Trust Code of 2010 to earlier trust instrument and transactions where that
application did not affect any " vested rights" ).
[8]
Paul et al. v. Smith, Gambrell & Russell, 323 Ga.App. 447, 746 S.E.2d 739 (2013)
July 16, 2013
Reconsideration denied July 29, 2013
-- Cert. applied for.
Page 740
Dismissal; five-year rule. Fulton
State Court. Before Judge Forsling.
Frank J. Beltran, for appellants.
Weinberg, Wheeler, Hudgins, Gunn
& Dial, Shawn D. Scott , Robert G. Tanner, for appellee.
MILLER, Judge. Barnes, P. J., and Ray,
J., concur in judgment only.
OPINION
Page 741
Miller, Judge.
This is the third appeal arising out
of a legal malpractice action that Appellants G. Douglas Paul, Sharon V. Paul,
Catspaw Productions, Inc. (" CPI" ), Catspaw, Inc., Atlanta Catco,
Inc., and Recording Studio, Inc. (" RSI" ) commenced against Smith,
Gambrell & Russell (" Smith Gambrell" ) in 2002. See Paul v.
Smith, Gambrell & Russell, 267 Ga.App. 107 (599 S.E.2d 206) (2004) ("
Paul I " ); Paul v. Smith, Gambrell & Russell, 283 Ga.App. 584 (642
S.E.2d 217) (2007) (" Paul II " ). In Paul II, the parties filed
cross-appeals from the trial court's April 11, 2005 order granting in part and
denying in part Smith Gambrell's second motion for summary judgment. 283
Ga.App. at 584-585. For the next five years after the April 11, 2005 order, no
written order was entered in the trial court. On July 12, 2011, the trial court
entered an order memorializing the automatic dismissal of the case pursuant to
OCGA § § 9-2-60 (b) and 9-11-41 (e), concluding that more than five years had
elapsed since the last order was entered in the case. On appeal, Appellants
argue, among other things, that the five-year period was tolled during the
pendency of the cross-appeals in Paul II. Finding this and Appellants' other
arguments unavailing, we affirm.
This appeal presents a question of
law subject to de novo review. See Jinks v. Eastman Enterprises, 317 Ga.App.
489, 489-490 (731 S.E.2d 378) (2012).
As recounted in greater detail in Paul
II, Appellants' action arises out of Smith Gambrell's representation of
Appellants prior to and during a lawsuit Ralph Destito, a shareholder of RSI
and a former employee of CPI, commenced against Appellants for fraud, breach of
fiduciary duty, and related claims (the " Destito action" ). 283
Ga.App. at 584-587. The Destito action resulted in a substantial verdict and
judgment against Appellants, and the judgment was affirmed on appeal.[1] Id. at
584.
In the first of two motions for
summary judgment in the present case, Smith Gambrell sought summary judgment on
the issue of [323 Ga.App. 448] punitive damages and its liability for failing
to call an accounting expert at trial in the Destito action, and the trial
court granted its motion on both issues. See Paul I, supra, 267 Ga.App. at
107-108. On appeal, this Court affirmed on the issue of punitive damages but
reversed as to the claim for failure to call an accounting expert. Id. at 108.
Prior to the decision in Paul I, Smith Gambrell filed its second motion for
summary judgment on the issues of its alleged malpractice in preparing
documents to merge RSI into CPI and subsequent Articles of Correction to
reverse the merger and its failure to prepare the Pauls to testify at trial in
the Destito action. Smith Gambrell's second motion did not address the claim
regarding the failure to call an accounting expert, as the trial court had
granted summary judgment in its favor on that claim.
In its April 11, 2005 order, the trial
court granted Smith Gambrell summary judgment on the issue of failing to
prepare the Pauls for trial but denied summary judgment on the issue of Smith
Gambrell's failure to exercise reasonable care in preparing the merger
documents. The parties filed cross-appeals, and this Court affirmed the April
11, 2005 order. Paul II, supra, 283 Ga.App. at 585.
No written order was entered in the
record following the April 11, 2005 order until an order was entered on
December 13, 2010 specially setting the matter for trial. After a jury was
empaneled on April 12, 2011, the trial court declared a mistrial, finding that
Page 742
Appellants
failed to identify one of its claims and supporting expert opinions during
discovery. Smith Gambrell subsequently moved to strike the action from the
docket under OCGA § § 9-2-60 (b) and 9-11-41 (e), and the trial court entered
an order memorializing the automatic dismissal of the case.
1. Appellants argue the trial court
erred in concluding that its action was dismissed by operation of law because
the five-year period under OCGA § § 9-2-60 (b) and 9-11-41 (e) was tolled
during the pendency of the cross-appeals in Paul II. We disagree.
" OCGA § § 9-2-60 (b) and 9-11-41
(e) are the statutory embodiment of the 'five-year rule.' Together, they
provide for the automatic dismissal of any action filed in a Georgia court of
record when 'no written order is taken for a period of five years[.]' "
Zepp v. Brannen, 283 Ga. 395, 396 (658 S.E.2d 567) (2008). The five-year rule
is " a reasonable procedural rule" that serves " the dual
purpose of preventing court records from becoming cluttered by unresolved and
inactive litigation and of protecting litigants from dilatory counsel."
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Brown v. Kroger Co., 278 Ga. 65, 68 (597
S.E.2d 382) (2004). These Code sections are mandatory, and dismissal occurs by
operation of law. Republic Claims Svc. Co. v. Hoyal, 264 Ga. 127, 128 (441
S.E.2d 755) (1994); Roberts v. Eayrs, 297 Ga.App. 821, 822 (2) [323 Ga.App.
449] (678 S.E.2d 535) (2009). We apply a bright-line rule for determining
whether an order is sufficient to reset the five-year clock. Windsor v. City of
Atlanta, 287 Ga. 334, 336 (2) (695 S.E.2d 576) (2010). " [I]n order to
toll the running of the five-year period that results in automatic dismissal
for non-action, an order must be written, signed by the trial judge, and
properly entered in the records of the trial court by filing it with the clerk."
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id.
Here, it is undisputed that more than
five years elapsed following the entry of the April 11, 2005 order before
another written order was entered in the record. Appellants attempted to avoid
the otherwise straightforward application of the fiveyear rule by arguing that
the five-year period was tolled for 22 months while the April 11, 2005 order
was on appeal in Paul II because a supersedeas was in effect pursuant to OCGA §
5-6-46 (a), depriving the trial court of jurisdiction. We have recognized that
the five-year period may be tolled under certain circumstances when a trial
court completely loses jurisdiction over a case. See, e.g., Jinks, supra, 317
Ga.App. at 491 (bankruptcy stay); Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Perry,
168 Ga.App. 387, 388 (308 S.E.2d 848) (1983) (removal to federal court). It is
well established, however, that " [t]he supersedeas that stems from the
filing of [a] ... notice of appeal is limited in that it supersedes only the
judgment appealed; it does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction as to
other matters in the same case not affecting the judgment on appeal."
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Avren v. Garten, 289 Ga. 186, 190 (6) (710
S.E.2d 130) (2011).
Appellants argue that the trial court
was divested of all jurisdiction in the case during the Paul II cross-appeals
because Smith Gambrell's second motion for summary judgment stated that Smith
Gambrell was entitled to summary judgment on the " entire case." Once
this Court issued its decision in Paul I reinstating Appellants' claim
regarding the failure to call an accounting expert, however, it was apparent
that a portion of Appellants' case would remain pending even if Smith Gambrell
prevailed on its second motion for summary judgment. As such, the trial court
had jurisdiction to proceed with at least part of the case during the pendency
of the cross-appeals, see Craft's Ocean Court v. Coast House, Ltd., 255 Ga.
336, 337-338 (2) (338 S.E.2d 277) (1986), and we conclude that no tolling of
the five-year period occurred.[2]
Page 743
[323 Ga.App. 450] Nelson v.
Haugabrook, 282 Ga.App. 399 (638 S.E.2d 840) (2006), upon which Appellants
rely, does not support a contrary result. In Nelson we held that the five-year
period was not tolled in between the time a certificate of immediate appellate
review of an interlocutory order was filed in the trial court and the
appellant's application for interlocutory review was denied. 282 Ga.App. at
401-402 (1) (b). Since the application was denied, the appellant in Nelson
never filed a notice of appeal effecting a supersedeas, and no loss of
jurisdiction occurred. Id. at 402 (1) (b). In Nelson, we did not address
whether a supersedeas would provide a basis for tolling the five-year period,
and indeed, we acknowledged that a supersedeas effects a loss of jurisdiction
only " as to matters contained within the appeal." (Footnote
omitted.) Id.
2. Relying on Simmerson v. Blanks, 183
Ga.App. 863 (360 S.E.2d 422) (1987), Appellants contend that the Court should
reverse the trial court's dismissal order to avoid a " manifest
injustice." We disagree. In Simmerson, the trial court dismissed an action
under the five-year rule, concluding that a prior continuance order that would
have prevented dismissal was invalid because it was entered ex parte and
without a written motion. Id. This Court disagreed that the continuance order
was invalid and applied the rule that a trial judge may not revoke a granted
continuance where " manifest injustice would result." (Citation and
punctuation omitted.) Id. at 864. The Court concluded that revocation would
result in a manifest injustice because revocation occurred three years after
the continuance was granted and five years had passed from the last written
order prior to the continuance order. Id. No similar circumstances are present
here, and the trial court in this case did not enter any order at all for a
period in excess of five years after the April 11, 2005 order.
3. Appellants also rely on Jefferson
v. Ross, 250 Ga. 817 (301 S.E.2d 268) (1983), to argue that dismissing their
case would not serve the purposes of the five-year rule. In Jefferson, the
Supreme Court of Georgia held that a trial court's authority to enter judgment
at any time after a jury verdict is not extinguished by the passage of five
years from the date of the verdict, finding that " the reasons behind the
Code sections ... no longer exist once the case has been prosecuted to
verdict." Id. at 818. Jefferson stands for the proposition that the [323
Ga.App. 451] five-year rule " applies to cases awaiting disposition, not
to cases already adjudicated by verdict or judgment." (Citations omitted.)
Lott v. Arrington & Hollowell, P.C., 258 Ga.App. 51, 55 (2) (b) (572 S.E.2d
664) (2002). Appellants' action never proceeded to verdict. Further, the issue
here is not the passage of five years following a disposition in the case.
Rather, five years passed without a written order before this case was set for
trial. Since the case was automatically dismissed as a matter of law, a trial
and verdict would have been a " mere nullity." (Citations omitted.)
Goodwyn v. Carter, 252 Ga.App. 114, 116 (555 S.E.2d 474) (2001). The holding in
Jefferson cannot save Appellants' action from automatic dismissal.
4. Finally, Appellants cite to news
stories reporting that the trial judge's case manager had engaged in misconduct
such as discarding original orders and pleadings and hiding files in a utility
closet. They argue that " [w]hile there is no evidence that any files
related to this case were discovered [in the closet], a reasonable probability
exists that [the] case manager hid or threw away orders in this case."
While the accounts that Appellants reference are disturbing, " [t]he mandatory
duty ... falls upon the plaintiff to obtain a written order and have it entered
upon the record to prevent an automatic dismissal." (Punctuation and
footnote omitted.) Roberts, supra, 297 Ga.App. at 822 (2). As it was
Appellants' responsibility to obtain and file an order, they cannot avoid
dismissal by speculating about
Page 744
unspecified
orders that were possibly mishandled by a court employee.
Judgment affirmed.
Barnes, P. J., and Ray, J., concur in
judgment only.
---------
Notes:
[1]See Paul
v. Destito, 250 Ga.App. 631 (550 S.E.2d 739) (2001).
[2]In their
reply brief Appellants argue that due to statements in Smith Gambrell's
Appellant's Brief in Paul II, as to the scope of the merger-related issues on
appeal, Appellants reasonably believed the " entire case" was before
this Court, and, as a result, the five-year period was tolled, at a minimum,
for the eight months between the filing of Smith Gambrell's brief and the
remittitur from this Court. Given that the claim regarding the failure to call
an accounting expert was indisputably still pending in the trial court,
Appellants' alleged belief that the entire case was on appeal was not
reasonable. In any event, an alleged mistaken impression as to the issues on appeal
would not relieve Appellants of the duty to ensure that a written order signed
by the trial judge was entered in the record. See Willis v. Columbus Medical
Center, 306 Ga.App. 331, 333 (702 S.E.2d 673) (2010) (counsel's mistaken belief
that Office of Dispute Resolution filed mediation order with clerk, as was its
usual practice, could not prevent dismissal).
END
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