Kavita Rampersad v. the Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners Association, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 17, 2025
DocketA25A0660
StatusPublished

This text of Kavita Rampersad v. the Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners Association, Inc. (Kavita Rampersad v. the Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners Association, Inc.) 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
Kavita Rampersad v. the Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners Association, Inc., (Ga. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., HODGES and PIPKIN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 17, 2025

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A25A0660. RAMPERSAD v. THE PLANTATION AT BAY CREEK HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.

HODGES, Judge.

This case originates from Kavita Rampersad’s ten-year failure to pay her

community’s required annual assessments. In this second appearance of this case in

this Court, Rampersad appeals pro se an order of the Superior Court of Gwinnett

County dismissing her counterclaim for attorney fees against The Plantation at Bay

Creek Homeowners Association, Inc. and setting aside as fraudulent her transfer of

the real property subject to the assessments (the “subject property”). Although

Rampersad raises ten enumerations of error, we have jurisdiction to consider only two.

For the following reasons, we affirm. Factual Background. To resolve Rampersad’s current appeal, a review of the

procedural history between these parties, as outlined in the earlier appeal, will be

helpful. In Rampersad v. The Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners Assn., we stated that

[t]he Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners’ Association [the “HOA”] sued to recover unpaid assessments on a residential property on Creek Bottom Road in Loganville, Georgia. The initial complaint named only Roshni Patel (“Roshni”) and Chandani Patel (“Patel”) as defendants. As the suit progressed, the HOA amended its complaint to (1) add Kavita Rampersad and three corporate defendants, all of whom had appeared in the property’s recent chain of title, and (2) seek additional remedies, including judicial foreclosure. In March 2017, after the HOA was unable to perfect service on any of the four additional defendants, the action was dismissed without prejudice.

In June 2017, the HOA sued the same six defendants a second time to recover the unpaid assessments, and it again sought damages and judicial foreclosure. Service was perfected on Roshni and the three corporate defendants, but the HOA was not able to perfect service on Rampersad and Patel. As a result, the trial court appointed special process servers, but their service attempts were also unsuccessful. The HOA then sought to depose Roshni to get the contact information for Rampersad and Patel, but according to an affidavit submitted by the HOA’s counsel, Roshni “refused to provide any information.” The HOA then moved to serve Rampersad and Patel by publication, and the court granted the

2 motion. The required notices were published in the Gwinnett Daily Post in August and September 2018.

In November 2018, Rampersad and Patel each filed an answer. These answers were untimely because they were filed more than 60 days after the July 31, 2018, order granting service by publication. Rampersad and Patel also moved for a continuance of the trial, which had been placed on the trial calendar for the weeks of November 26-30 and December 3-7, 2018. None of these motions were ruled on before the case was called for trial on November 26, 2018, and none of the defendants appeared at the trial. At the trial, after hearing from a single witness called by the HOA, and then from the HOA’s counsel about attorney fees and costs, the court entered judgment in favor of the HOA. The final order imposed a $14,231.40 lien on the property and authorized a foreclosure on the property to satisfy the lien.[1]

In December 2018, Rampersad moved to set aside the judgment. She challenged the sufficiency of service and claimed, among other things, that she had never received either the trial notice or a copy of the court’s judgment. For her part, Patel filed a notice of appeal in January 2019. In June 2020, this Court dismissed the appeal as untimely. Patel v. The Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners’ Association, Inc., 355 Ga. App. XXVII (Case No. A20A0178) (June 26, 2020) (unpublished). After that

1 The trial court’s November 26, 2018 final order entered judgment against each of the six defendants. Only Patel and Rampersad pursued any appellate remedies, such that they were the only two remaining defendants at that time. 3 dismissal, Patel filed her own motion to set aside in the trial court. In August 2020, the trial court entered a summary order denying the motions to set aside. It does not appear that any hearing was held before the motions were denied.

On September 1, 2020, the Gwinnett County Sheriff held a foreclosure sale, at which the property was sold for $110,000. In the meantime, both Rampersad and Patel timely applied for discretionary appeal from the denial of the motions to set aside, and their applications were granted. Soon after, the HOA filed a “Motion to Compel Interpleader of Foreclosure Proceeds,” noting that, on the HOA’s request, the Sheriff was currently holding the funds from the foreclosure sale and asking the court to order the funds to be “held in the Court’s registry pending disposition of the appeals.” The motion was granted, and the buyer’s cashier’s check was placed in the registry of the court.

(Footnotes omitted.) 362 Ga. App. 329, 329-331 (868 SE2d 475) (2022) (“Rampersad

I”). We vacated the trial court’s order denying Rampersad’s motion to set aside the

judgment,2 directing the trial court to consider: “(a) whether the HOA exercised the

required diligence in its efforts to perfect service on [Rampersad]; (b) if so, whether

2 In the same opinion, we dismissed Patel’s companion appeal, noting that “her decision to pursue an untimely appeal earlier—rather than moving to have the judgment set aside, as Rampersad did—forecloses this second effort to seek appellate review now.” Rampersad I, 362 Ga. App. at 332 (2). With that, Patel’s case was at an end, leaving Rampersad as the sole remaining defendant. 4 she received sufficient notice of the trial date as required by OCGA § 9-11-40 (c); and

(c) if she was properly served and notified of the trial date, whether the court notified

Rampersad of the judgment as required by OCGA § 15-6-21 (c).” Id. at 336.

On remand, the trial court granted Rampersad’s motion to set aside in an

August 2022 order, concluding that the HOA had not “exercised reasonable diligence

under the set of facts in this case in attempting to personally serve Defendant

Rampersad.” After additional unsuccessful efforts to serve Rampersad personally, the

trial court again authorized the HOA to serve her by publication in November 2022.

Rampersad answered in January 2023 and included a counterclaim for attorney fees,

apparently pursuant to OCGA § 13-6-11.3 Four days later, the HOA moved for

summary judgment. Contemporaneously with her response to the HOA’s motion,

Rampersad filed an amended answer and counterclaims for wrongful foreclosure and

attorney fees (again, apparently under OCGA § 13-6-11).

Following a hearing, the trial court granted the HOA’s summary judgment

motion in a May 9, 2023 order and awarded the HOA damages and attorney fees

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Kavita Rampersad v. the Plantation at Bay Creek Homeowners Association, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kavita-rampersad-v-the-plantation-at-bay-creek-homeowners-association-gactapp-2025.