KOS LIMITED v. CHRISTINA MICHELLE DOCKERY

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 2024
DocketA23A1697
StatusPublished

This text of KOS LIMITED v. CHRISTINA MICHELLE DOCKERY (KOS LIMITED v. CHRISTINA MICHELLE DOCKERY) 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
KOS LIMITED v. CHRISTINA MICHELLE DOCKERY, (Ga. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, P. J., RICKMAN 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

March 15, 2024

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A1697. KOS LIMITED v. DOCKERY et al.

PIPKIN, Judge.

Appellant KOS Limited (“KOS”) appeals the trial court’s order denying its

motion to set aside the default judgment and damages entered against it in this action

asserting claims for, among others, negligence, gross negligence, strict liability and

wrongful death. As more fully set forth below, we now affirm.

On March 2, 2012, Adam Wingo was employed as a machine operator in

Flowery Branch, Georgia, at a company that manufactured steel wire. On that date,

Wingo reached into the machine to adjust a wire, was pulled into the machine,

entangled in the wire, and decapitated. In February 2014, Appellee Christina Michelle

Dockery, as the administrator of Wingo’s estate and next friend of his minor child, filed suit against multiple defendants, including KOS. Most of the defendants were

dismissed or otherwise removed from the case, leaving Korean-based companies

Haedong Industries Co., Ltd. and Inhwa Precision Corporation, Ltd., the alleged

parent company of Haedong (collectively “Inhwa” or “Inhwa Defendants”) and

KOS, an unrelated entity. In the second amended complaint, which is the operative

complaint here, Appellee asserted ordinary and gross negligence claims against KOS

based on, among other things, its installation of the machine without sufficient safety

guards while having knowledge of the serious dangers the machine posed to its users

and without warning of these known dangers. Appellee’s claims against the Inhwa

Defendants were based on strict liability, negligent design/manufacture, and failure

to warn.

KOS retained counsel, participated in discovery, and filed multiple motions in

the case, including a motion for summary judgment. While the summary judgment

motion was pending, KOS’s attorney withdrew, and on May 21, 2018, the trial court

ordered KOS to obtain new counsel. KOS failed to obtain counsel, and on September

14, 2018, after it failed to appear at the hearing on the summary judgment motion, the

2 trial court struck KOS’s answer, found it in default as to liability, and ordered a trial

on damages.

Meanwhile, the Inhwa Defendants never filed an answer to the complaint, and

the trial court entered a default judgment against them in 2017. In 2018, the trial court

held a damages trial on the claims against the Inhwa Defendants; these proceedings

were not taken down. On September 17, 2018, the court entered judgment against the

Inhwa Defendants, jointly and severally, in the amount of $20,722,105.26 on the

wrongful death claim and $5,000,529.00 on the estate’s claims.1

A few months later, on November 29, 2018, the trial court conducted a second

damages trial on the claims against KOS; KOS failed to appear or otherwise

1 On December 13, 2018, the Inhwa Defendants filed a motion to set aside alleging, among other things, a nonamendable defect appearing on the face of the record or pleadings under OCGA § 9-11-60 (d) (3) and a motion to open default. The trial court initially granted the motion to set aside but denied the motion to open default. We granted Inhwa’s application for interlocutory appeal, and ultimately vacated the trial court’s order and remanded for “the trial court to make explicit any basis for its decision(s) relative to whether [Inhwa’s] motion to set aside should be granted.” Dockery v. Haedong Indus. Co., 355 Ga. App. 436, 439 (1) (844 SE2d 496) (2020). On remand the trial court reversed course, and, on October 23, 2020, entered an order denying Inhwa’s motion to set aside; in denying the motion, the trial court specifically determined that the failure to apportion did not constitute a basis for setting aside the judgment since the Inhwa Defendants did not appear at the damages hearing and “offered no evidence as to apportionment[.]” The Inhwa Defendants did not file an appeal from that order. 3 participate in the damages trial,2 and this hearing was also not taken down. On

December 3, 2018, the trial court issued judgment against KOS in the amount of

$20,722,105.26 on the wrongful death claim and $5,000,539.00 on the estate claim,

for a total award of $25,722,644.26, which was exactly the same as the total damages

awarded in the Inhwa judgment.3

Although KOS had not participated in the litigation since the spring of 2018,

on December 3, 2021, exactly three years after the judgment had been entered against

it, KOS’s new counsel filed an entry of appearance and a motion to set aside the

judgment and to open default. KOS argued, among other things, that because the

Inhwa Defendants had been found liable by the time the trial court entered judgment

against KOS, the trial court was required by the applicable version of OCGA § 51-12-

33 to apportion the damages awarded between KOS and the Inhwa Defendants4 and,

2 The trial court made a specific finding in the December 3, 2018 judgment that KOS had notice of the of the damages trial, and KOS does not claim otherwise. 3 There was a very slight difference in the amount of damages awarded to the estate in the two judgments, but we assume this was merely a scrivener’s error since the total amount of the damages awarded against KOS and Inhwa was the same. 4 Throughout the remainder of this opinion, where appropriate, KOS and the Inhwa Defendants will be referred to collectively as the “defaulting defendants.” 4 further, that the failure to do so constituted a nonamendable defect appearing on the

face of the record entitling it to have the judgment set aside under OCGA § 9-11-60

(d) (3).5 Following a hearing, the trial court determined that KOS waived any

argument that apportionment was required or appropriate by failing to appear at the

damages trial or otherwise present evidence of or request apportionment.

Alternatively, the trial court concluded that because none of the defaulting defendants

appeared at their respective damages trials to present argument or evidence

concerning the allocation of damages between them, the trial court did not have a basis

on which to apportion the damages award. Thus, the trial court concluded, the failure

to apportion in “this case was not an error or defect on the face of the pleadings” and

denied the motion. KOS filed an application for discretionary appeal from this order,

which we granted, and then timely filed this appeal.

1. KOS argues that apportionment was required “on the face of the record” in

this case and thus the trial court erred by refusing to set aside the judgment under

5 OCGA § 9-11-60 (d) (3) authorizes a court to set aside a judgment based upon “[a] nonamendable defect which appears upon the face of the record or pleadings.” 5 OCGA § 9-11-60 (d) (3). We begin our analysis of this issue by setting out, in relevant

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KOS LIMITED v. CHRISTINA MICHELLE DOCKERY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kos-limited-v-christina-michelle-dockery-gactapp-2024.