JOHN DA GROSA SMITH v. RYAN MILLSAP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 13, 2023
DocketA23A0651
StatusPublished

This text of JOHN DA GROSA SMITH v. RYAN MILLSAP (JOHN DA GROSA SMITH v. RYAN MILLSAP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JOHN DA GROSA SMITH v. RYAN MILLSAP, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., BROWN AND MARKLE, J.J.

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

October 13, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A0651. SMITH et al. v. MILLSAP et al.

MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.

This appeal is from an order that disburses funds that had been held in the

registry of the Gwinnett Superior Court. Those funds had been held on the basis of

an attorney’s lien filed by the appellants. The lien was filed in litigation in which the

appellees were opposing parties, and the appellants had represented one of them. See

OCGA § 15-19-14 (b) (providing for an attorney lien “[u]pon actions, judgments, and

decrees for money”). The funds were proceeds from a sale of real property that the

appellees had agreed to place into the court registry pending the resolution of the

litigation between them.

Appellants John Da Grosa Smith and his law firm (collectively, “Smith”) had

represented appellees Ryan Millsap and associated entities (collectively, “Millsap” or the “Millsap defendants”). That representation had included the underlying

litigation, which had been brought by appellees James Schulz and associated entities

(collectively, “Schulz” or the “Schulz plaintiffs”) against appellee Millsap.

The Gwinnett Superior Court entered the disbursal order after canceling

Smith’s attorney lien and after an arbitrator in a separate proceeding had rejected

appellant Smith’s fees claim against appellee Millsap. The arbitration award rejected

Smith’s claims in their entirety and sanctioned him with a substantial attorney fees

award. But that arbitration award had not been confirmed when the trial court

disbursed the funds.

We have jurisdiction. The disbursal order is a final order in this proceeding. It

is not moot. And Smith has standing to appeal from it because, in entering the order

disbursing the funds, the trial court implicitly denied Smith’s pending motion to

intervene in this proceeding.

We affirm on the merits. The disbursal order was not an abuse of the superior

court’s very broad discretion in controlling funds in its registry. And that order

mooted all of Smith’s remaining claims.

1. Procedural history.

2 This case has a complicated procedural history, including three earlier appeals

to this court. Some of that history is described in our opinion in one of those earlier

appeals. See Smith v. Millsap, 364 Ga. App. 162, 163-164 (874 SE2d 184) (2022)

(hereinafter Smith I). Because that history is important to our conclusion that the trial

court did not abuse his discretion in releasing the registry funds, we set it out in more

detail here.

(a) The Schulz plaintiffs bring the underlying action against the Millsap

defendants, which is ultimately referred to arbitration conditioned upon the closing

of a real estate transaction.

On October 22, 2018, the Schulz plaintiffs filed a complaint against Millsap,

which they would later amend, in the Superior Court of Gwinnett County. Schulz

asserted several causes of action arising from his claims that he and Millsap had

entered into a partnership in a movie studio venture involving Blackhall Studios,

LLC; that their agreement gave him and his associated entities an interest in Blackhall

Studios; and that Millsap and his associated entities had worked together to deprive

Schulz of that interest by way of, among other things, transferring real property into

two entities — Blackhall Real Estate, LLC and Blackhall Real Estate Phase II, LLC

— formed after Schulz had filed his initial complaint.

3 In 2020, the Schulz plaintiffs filed a lis pendens against real property owned

by Blackhall Real Estate and Blackhall Real Estate Phase II. This led to a

disagreement between Millsap and Schulz in the underlying action about whether

Schulz’s claims in that action could affect the title to that real property. The lis

pendens hampered efforts by Blackhall Real Estate in late 2020 to refinance the real

property.

In January 2021, the Schulz plaintiffs and the Millsap defendants entered into

an agreement to arbitrate their dispute conditioned upon the closing of a real estate

transaction, scheduled for March 22, 2021, involving some of the real property

identified in the lis pendens. On March 9, 2021, the trial court entered a stipulated

order in the underlying action that, among other things, incorporated the appellees’

agreement to arbitrate and referred the case between them to binding, non-appealable

arbitration, but retained jurisdiction to take certain actions including entering a final

judgment on an arbitration award. The trial court acknowledged that the arbitration

was conditioned upon the real estate transaction closing no later than March 26, 2021.

If that transaction occurred, then Schulz and Millsap agreed to deposit at least $30

million of the funds resulting from the transaction into the trial court registry for later

distribution in accordance with the arbitration award. But if that transaction did not

4 occur by March 26, then the arbitration reference would be terminated and full

jurisdiction over the case between Schulz and Millsap would revert to the trial court.

(b) A dispute arises between Smith and Millsap, leading to a separate

arbitration proceeding between them and Smith’s filing of the attorney lien that the

trial court would subsequently cancel and that is now before us.

Around the time that the trial court referred the underlying action to arbitration

and shortly before the real estate transaction was scheduled to occur, a dispute arose

between Smith and Millsap about Smith’s legal representation that led to the

instigation of a separate arbitration proceeding between them and Smith’s filing of

an attorney lien in the underlying action between Schulz and Millsap.

Smith had represented the Millsap defendants in the underlying action since

August 2019, and in May 2020 he had become Blackhall Real Estate’s chief legal

counsel under an employment agreement that included an arbitration provision. But

in December 2020 new counsel entered an appearance on behalf of the Millsap

defendants in the underlying action and on March 4, 2021, Millsap informed Smith

that he did not want Smith to have “directional responsibility for the arbitration” with

Schulz.

5 On March 16, 2021, Smith notified the trial court that he was withdrawing as

counsel for the Millsap defendants in the underlying action. That same day, Millsap

initiated a separate arbitration proceeding against Smith under Smith’s employment

contract. The arbitration proceeding between Smith and Millsap addressed Smith’s

performance under his employment contract and his entitlement to attorney fees from

Millsap beyond what that contract provided.

On March 22, 2021, the day the real estate transaction was originally intended

to take place, Smith, through counsel, filed a document titled “Attorneys’ Lien” in the

underlying case between Schulz and Millsap. In that filing, Smith stated that, “as

permitted by OCGA § 15-19-14

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